py2p10 current electricity - nicky

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\\\\\\\\\\ Your course, please A. Science B. Nanoscience C. Theoretical Physics Session ID: PY2P10EM Laptop: responseware.eu

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Page 1: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

\\\\\\\\\\

Your course, please

A. Science

B. Nanoscience

C. Theoretical Physics

Session ID: PY2P10EM Laptop: responseware.eu

Page 2: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

AC Sources

β€’ Most present-day household and industrial power distribution systems operate with alternating current (ac).

β€’ Any appliance that you plug into a wall outlet uses ac.

β€’ An ac source is a device that supplies a sinusoidally varying voltage.

Page 3: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Sinusoids

A sinusoidal is a signal that has the form of the sine or cosine function, which is a time-varying excitation

It is a period function of time 𝑑 with period 𝑇 =2πœ‹

πœ”:

𝑣 𝑑 + 𝑛𝑇 = π‘‰π‘š cos πœ” 𝑑 + 𝑛𝑇 + πœ™ = π‘‰π‘š cos πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™ + π‘›πœ”π‘‡

= π‘‰π‘š cos πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™ + π‘›πœ”2πœ‹

πœ”= π‘‰π‘šcos πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™ + 𝑛2πœ‹

= π‘‰π‘šcos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™) = 𝑣(𝑑)

𝑣 𝑑 = π‘‰π‘š cos πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™Sinusoidal

the amplitude

angular frequency measured in radians/s and the cyclic frequency 𝑓 in Hz, πœ” = 2πœ‹π‘“

the phase

Page 4: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Two sinusoids cos(π‘₯ + πœ‹/3) leads cos(π‘₯) by πœ‹/3

cos(π‘₯ βˆ’ πœ‹/3) lags cos π‘₯ by πœ‹/3

𝑣1 = cos π‘₯ +πœ‹

3, πœ™1 =

πœ‹

3

𝑣2 = cos π‘₯, πœ™2 = 0

𝑣1 leads 𝑣2 by

Ξ”πœ™ = πœ™1 βˆ’ πœ™2 =πœ‹

3

Page 5: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Phase angleA sinusoid can be expressed in either sine or cosine form. When comparing two sinusoids, it is expedient to express both as either sine or cosine with positive amplitudes.

β€’ Ξ”πœ™ > 0, 𝑣1 leads 𝑣2 by Ξ”πœ™β€’ Ξ”πœ™ = 0, 𝑣1 and 𝑣2 are in phase

β€’ Ξ”πœ™ < 0, 𝑣1 lags 𝑣2 by Ξ”πœ™

Ξ”πœ™ = πœ™1 βˆ’ πœ™2

Phase angle

between two

signals:

𝑣1 = π‘‰π‘š1 cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™1)

𝑣2 = π‘‰π‘š2 cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™2)

Positive

Use cosine

βˆ’cos π‘₯ = cos(π‘₯ Β± πœ‹)

sin(π‘₯) = cos(π‘₯ βˆ’πœ‹

2)

βˆ’π… < 𝝓 < 𝝅

Page 6: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Q1: The phase angle between,

𝑣1 = βˆ’10 cos(πœ”π‘‘ +πœ‹

3) and

𝑣2 = 12 sin πœ”π‘‘ +πœ‹

6

is: πœ‹

3βˆ’

πœ‹

6=

πœ‹

6. This means 𝑣1 leads 𝑣2 by

πœ‹

6.

A. True

B. False

Page 7: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Answer to Q1:

Use the same form:

𝑣1 = βˆ’10 cos πœ”π‘‘ +πœ‹

3= 10 cos πœ”π‘‘ +

πœ‹

3βˆ’ πœ‹ = 10 cos πœ”π‘‘ βˆ’

2πœ‹

3

𝑣2 = 12 sin πœ”π‘‘ +πœ‹

6= 12 cos(πœ”π‘‘ +

πœ‹

6βˆ’πœ‹

2) = 12 cos(πœ”π‘‘ βˆ’

πœ‹

3)

Compare:

Ξ”πœ™ = βˆ’2πœ‹

3βˆ’πœ‹

3= βˆ’

πœ‹

3< 0

Therefore, 𝑣1 lags 𝑣2 by πœ‹

3.

Page 8: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Phasor

β€’ A phasor is a complex number that represents the amplitude (e.g. π‘‰π‘š) and phase (πœ™) of a sinusoid, 𝑣 𝑑 = π‘‰π‘š cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™).

β€’ The real part of a phasor represents the sinusoid signal 𝑣 𝑑 .

β€’ Since we consider a single frequency, the phasor can be written as 𝑽 = π‘‰π‘šπ‘’

π‘–πœ™ , i.e. π‘’π‘–πœ”π‘‘ is implicitly present.

Phasor : π‘‰π‘šπ‘’π‘– πœ”π‘‘+πœ™ = π‘‰π‘š cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™) + π‘–π‘‰π‘š sin(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)

Exponential representation Rectangular representation

The sinusoid signal 𝑣(𝑑)

Page 9: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Q2: The phasor of 𝑣1 = βˆ’10 cos(πœ”π‘‘ +πœ‹

3) is

A. βˆ’10π‘’π‘–πœ‹

3

B. 10π‘’π‘–πœ‹

3

C. 10π‘’βˆ’π‘–πœ‹

3

D. 10π‘’βˆ’π‘–2πœ‹

3

Page 10: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Q3: The ac sinusoid voltage 𝑣(𝑑) (πœ” = 4 rads/s) that corresponds to a phasor 𝑽 = 3V is

A. 3 V

B. cos(4𝑑 + 3)V

C. 3 cos(4𝑑)V

D. 3 sin(4𝑑) V

E. 3 cos(4𝑑 + πœ‹)V

Page 11: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Answer to Q2-Q3

Q2: To wirte the phasor for 𝑣1 = βˆ’10 cos(πœ”π‘‘ +πœ‹

3) , we first need to

convert it into the conventional form, i.e. a cosine with a positive amplitude,

𝑣1 = βˆ’10 cos πœ”π‘‘ +πœ‹

3= 10 cos πœ”π‘‘ +

πœ‹

3βˆ’ πœ‹ = 10 cos(πœ”π‘‘ βˆ’

2πœ‹

3)

Therefore, 𝑽 = 10π‘’βˆ’2πœ‹

3𝑖 = 10∠ βˆ’ 120O

Q3: Note 𝑽 = 3 = 3e𝑖⋅0, i.e. the amplitude is 3 V, the phase is 0, and πœ” = 4

Therefore𝑣 𝑑 = 3 cos πœ”π‘‘ + 0 = 3 cos(4𝑑) V

Page 12: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Phasor diagram

β€’ To represent sinusoidallyvarying voltages and currents, we define rotating vectors in the Argand plane called phasors.

β€’ Shown is a phasor diagramfor sinusoidal voltage and current with their initial phases πœ™ and βˆ’πœƒ.

Page 13: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Time domain and phasor (frequency) domain

Time-domain representation is time dependent and always real, and its phasor (or frequency) domain counterpart is time-independent, generally complex. The phasor domain is for a constant πœ”, i.e. we consider signals which have the same frequency. Circuit response depends on πœ”. If we switch from one frequency to another, the circuit responses changes.

π‘‰π‘šπ‘’π‘–πœ™

Time-independent and complex

Phasor Time

Time-dependent and real

π‘‰π‘š cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)

Page 14: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Derivative and integral in phasor domain

In phasor representation, the time derivative of a sinusoid becomes just multiplication by the constant π‘–πœ”; integrating a

phasor corresponds to multiplication by 1

π‘–πœ”.

PhasorTime

𝑣 𝑑 = π‘‰π‘š cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)𝑑𝑣 𝑑

𝑑𝑑= βˆ’π‘‰π‘šπœ” sin πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™ = π‘‰π‘šπœ” cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™ +

πœ‹

2)

ࢱ𝑣 𝑑 𝑑𝑑 =π‘‰π‘šπœ”sin(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™) =

π‘‰π‘šπœ”cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™ βˆ’

πœ‹

2)

𝑽 = π‘‰π‘šπ‘’π‘–πœ™

π‘‰π‘šπœ”π‘’π‘– πœ™+

πœ‹2 = (π‘‰π‘šπ‘’

π‘–πœ™)πœ”π‘’π‘–πœ‹2 = π‘–πœ”π‘½

π‘‰π‘šπœ”π‘’π‘– πœ™βˆ’

πœ‹2 = π‘‰π‘šπ‘’

π‘–πœ™π‘’βˆ’π‘–

πœ‹2

πœ”=

𝑽

π‘–πœ”

Try this: 𝑑 π‘‰π‘šπ‘’π‘– πœ”π‘‘+πœ™

𝑑𝑑

Page 15: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Q4: In an ac circuit, the voltage across a 4Ξ©resistor is 𝑣 𝑑 = 4 cos(10𝑑 + πœ‹/3), the phase of the current through the resistor is

A. 0

B. βˆ’πœ‹

3

C.πœ‹

3

D. None of the above

Page 16: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Q5: For a resistor, its voltage and current are always in phase.

A. True

B. False

Page 17: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Resistor in an ac circuit

β€’ The resistance does not depend on the frequency of the ac source.

β€’ The voltage and current are related by Ohm’s law: 𝑣𝑅(𝑑) = 𝑖𝑅 𝑑 𝑅 and Ohm’s law holds in phasor domain.

β€’ Current and voltage are in phase.

PhasorTime

𝑖𝑅 𝑑 = πΌπ‘š cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)𝑣𝑅 𝑑 = 𝑖𝑅 𝑑 𝑅 = πΌπ‘šπ‘… cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)

𝑰𝑹 = πΌπ‘šπ‘’π‘–πœ™

𝑽𝑹 = πΌπ‘šπ‘…π‘’π‘–πœ™ = 𝑅𝑰𝑹

Page 18: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Q6: For an inductor, its voltage and current are always in phase.

A. True

B. False

Page 19: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Inductor in an ac circuit

β€’ The inductance does not depend on the frequency of the ac source.

β€’ The voltage and current are related by :

𝑣𝐿(𝑑) = 𝐿𝑑𝑖𝐿 𝑑

𝑑𝑑.

β€’ Voltage leads current by πœ‹/2

PhasorTime

𝑖𝐿 𝑑 = πΌπ‘š cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)

𝑣𝐿 𝑑 = 𝐿𝑑𝑖𝐿 𝑑

𝑑𝑑= βˆ’πΏπœ”πΌπ‘š sin(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)

𝑰𝑳 = πΌπ‘šπ‘’π‘–πœ™

𝑽𝑳 = (π‘–πœ”πΏ)𝑰𝑳

Page 20: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Q7: For a capacitor, its voltage and current are always in phase.

A. True

B. False

Page 21: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Capacitor in an ac circuit

β€’ The capacitance does not depend on the frequency of the ac source.

β€’ The voltage and current are related by :

𝑖𝐢(𝑑) = 𝐢𝑑𝑣𝐢 𝑑

𝑑𝑑.

β€’ Current leads voltage by πœ‹/2.

PhasorTime

𝑣𝑐 𝑑 = π‘‰π‘š cos(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)

𝑖𝐢 𝑑 = 𝐢𝑑𝑣𝑐 𝑑

𝑑𝑑= βˆ’πΆπœ”π‘‰π‘š sin(πœ”π‘‘ + πœ™)

𝑰π‘ͺ = πΌπ‘šπ‘’π‘–πœ™

𝑽π‘ͺ =𝑰π‘ͺπ‘–πœ”πΆ

Page 22: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Impedance and admittance

β€’ Impedance represents the opposition to the flow of sinusoidal current.

β€’ 𝒁 is generally a complex number (Ξ©).

β€’ Admittance, 𝒀 = 𝟏/𝒁 is the inverse of impedance (S).

𝑽 = 𝒁𝑰

𝑽 = 𝑅𝑰𝑽 = π‘–πœ”πΏ 𝑰

𝑽 =1

π‘–πœ”πΆπ‘°

Phasor

Impedance

Continued on next page

Page 23: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

β€’ 𝑋 < 0, capacitive/leading reactance, e.g. 𝒁 = βˆ’1

πœ”πΆπ‘–

β€’ 𝑋 > 0, inductive/lagging reactance, e.g. 𝒁 = πœ”πΏ 𝑖

Impedance:

Admittance:

𝒁 = 𝑅 + 𝑖𝑋

𝒀 =𝟏

𝒁= 𝐺 + 𝑖𝐡

Resistance Reactance

Conductance Susceptance

Page 24: PY2P10 Current Electricity - Nicky

Capacitor Inductor

πœ” β†’ 0 𝒁 = βˆ’1

πœ”πΆπ‘– β†’ ∞

open circuit

𝒁 = πœ”πΏ 𝑖 β†’ 0short circuit

πœ” β†’ ∞ 𝒁 = βˆ’1

πœ”πΆπ‘– β†’ 0

short circuit

𝒁 = πœ”πΏ 𝑖 β†’ ∞open circuit

Circuit response depends on the frequency