The superposition theorem for electrical circuits states that for a
linear system the response (voltage or current)
in any branch of a bilateral linear circuit having more than one independent
source equals the algebraic sum of the responses caused by each independent
source acting alone, where all the other independent sources are replaced by
their internal impedances.
To ascertain the contribution of
each individual source, all of the other sources first must be "turned
off" (set to zero) by:
1. Replacing all other
independent voltage sources with a short circuit (thereby
eliminating difference of potential i.e. V=0; internal impedance of ideal voltage
source is zero (short circuit)).
2. Replacing all other
independent current sources with an open circuit (thereby
eliminating current i.e. I=0; internal impedance of ideal current
source is infinite (open circuit)).
This procedure is followed for
each source in turn, and then the resultant responses are added to determine
the true operation of the circuit. The resultant circuit operation is the
superposition of the various voltage and current sources.
The superposition theorem is very
important in circuit analysis. It is used in converting any circuit into
its Norton equivalent or Thevenin equivalent.
The theorem is applicable to
linear networks (time varying or time invariant) consisting of independent
sources, linear dependent sources, linear passive elements (resistors, inductors,
capacitors)
and linear transformers.
Another point that should be
considered is that superposition only works for voltage and current but not
power. In other words the sum of the powers of each source with the other
sources turned off is not the real consumed power. To calculate power we should
first use superposition to find both current and voltage of each linear element
and then calculate the sum of the multiplied voltages and currents.

Overview and Insights
To calculate the contribution of each source
independently, all the other sources must be removed and replaced without
affecting the final result.
When removing a voltage source, its voltage must be
set to zero, which is equivalent to replacing the voltage source with a short
circuit.
When removing a current source, its current must be
set to zero, which is equivalent to replacing the current source with an open
circuit.
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