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Download EGN 3373 Week 12b – AC Power
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EGN 3373 Introduction to Electrical Systems I A Systems Approach to Electrical Engineering Graphics Adapted from “Physical, Earth, and Space Science”, Tom Hsu, cpoScience. Let’s Look at Power in AC Circuits Emphasis is placed on Power in AC circuits, and to facilitate the discussion the following voltage and current signals will be used along with impedance Z. P = VRMS I RMS [ cos(! v ! ! i )] Power in AC Circuits Based on the definition for the average power: of For sines and cosines over a full cycle (period) is zero, the a Resistive Load the phase angle is zero ns after integration. and therefore the average power becomes: The residential voltage of 110 V is actually the RMS value of the sinusoid signal delivered by the power company, which ad the phase angle is value zero of (i.e. ! v ! ! i ) )isand therefore the means the maximum the(sinusoid approximately 155 volts. 2 VRMS 2 P = VRMS I RMS = = I RMS R R ge of 110 V is actually the RMS value of the sinusoid signal d Effective RMS Values The value of an AC voltage is continually oscillating from the positive peak to the negative peak through zero. This makes the voltage value less than the peak value during most of the cycle. We use the root mean square (rms) value for sine waves (V and I) to represent the effective value of a varying voltage or current. VRMS is 0.7 of the peak voltage Vpeak In addition, effective or RMS (root mean square) values of a periodic signal are defined in terms of the average power delivered to a resistive load. Effective RMS Values In addition, effective or RMS (root mean square) values of a periodic signal are defined in terms of the average power delivered to a resistive load. Applying a periodic voltage v(t) with period T to a resistive load R, then power delivered is defined as P(t) = v2(t) / R Furthermore, the average power delivered to the resistance is the energy delivered in one cycle divided by the period T Pavg = ET/T = Vrms2/ R where and demonstrates that resistors dissipate energy while inductors and capacitors store energy. The terms “leading” and “lagging” are also introduced. RESISTIVE!LOAD:! Z R = Z R ! 0° Power in AC Circuits Im I v(t) = VM cos(! t + ! ) = VM ! ! i(t) = I M cos(! t + ! ) = I M ! ! I, V, and P for a Resistive Load V φ For a purely resistive load the current and voltage will be in phase. 0 The instantaneous power is given by: p(t) = v(t)²i(t) = VM I M cos2 (! t + ! ) INDUCTIVE!LOAD:! Z L = j! L = ! L! 90° Im v(t) = VM cos(! t + ! ) = VM ! ! V i(t) = I M cos(! t + ! ² 90°) = I M ! (! ² 90°) φ For a purely inductive load the current and voltage will be out of phase by 90°. The current is lagging the voltage. The instantaneous power is given by: 0 Re I CAPACITIVE!LOAD! Power in AC ZCircuits 1 j = =! = C j! C !C I, V, and P for a Capacitive Load 1 ² ! 90° !C v(t) = VM cos(! t + ! ) = VM ² ! i(t) = I M cos(! t + ! + 90°) = I M ² (! + 90°) Im I φ 0 Re V For a purely capacitive load the current and voltage will be out of phase by 90°. The current is leading the voltage. The instantaneous power is given by: p(t) = v(t)#i(t) = ! VM I M sin 2(! t + ! ) 2 The above derivations indicate that the average power for inductors and capacitors will be zero, simply because this quantity is a sinusoid in both cases, and therefore its average value over one cycle will be zero. On the other hand, the average power for a resistor is the square of the cosine, the integral of which over one cycle is not zero; these results simply suggest that resistances dissipate power while inductors and capacitors are (ideally) storage elements. The phase difference between the current and voltage for an inductor and a capacitor results in the current lagging the voltage for an inductor, while for a capacitor the current leads the The instantaneous power is given by: p(t) = v(t)²i(t) = VM I M cos2 (! t + ! ) INDUCTIVE!LOAD:! Power in AC Circuits Z L = j! L = ! L! 90° I, V, and P for a Inductive Load v(t) = V M Im cos(! t + ! ) = VM ! ! V i(t) = I M cos(! t + ! ² 90°) = I M ! (! ² 90°) φ For a purely inductive load the current and voltage will be out of phase by 90°. 0 Re I The current is lagging the voltage. The instantaneous power is given by: p(t) = v(t)#i(t) = Prepared'by'C.'S.'Ferekides' VM I M sin 2(! t + ! ) 2 83 •Three-Phase Systems •Why not DC? • No easy way to change voltage levels • Complicated rotating machine design and construction •Why not single-phase AC? • Pulsating torque • Efficiency issue: kVA per MCM of copper •Two-Phase Power •Two-Phase Power •Two-Phase Power •Two-Phase Power •AC Power •v(t) = Vm cos (t + v) •i(t) = Im cos (t + i) •s(t) = v(t) x i(t)•= Vm Im cos (t + v) cos (t + i) 1 cos cos cos cos 2 •s(t) = (Vm Im)/2 [cos (v i) + cos (2t + v + i)] •AC Power •s(t) = (Vm Im)/2 [cos (v i) + cos (2t + v + i)] •2t + v + i = 2(t + v) – (v – i) Vm Im s(t) cos v i cos2 t v v i 2 2 •cos ( – ) = cos cos + sin sin s(t) Vrms Irms cosv i cos2 t v cosv i sin 2 t v sin v i •AC Power s(t) Vrms Irms cosv i cos2 t v cosv i sin2 t v sin v i •Constant component of real power •Oscillating component of real power •Reactive power •Let P = Vrms Irms cos (v – i) •and Q = Vrms Irms sin (v – i) •s(t) = P + P cos [2(t + v)] + Q sin [2(t + v)] •AC Power •AC Power •AC Power •s(t) = P + P cos [2(t + v)] + Q sin [2(t + v)] •P = Vrms Irms cos (v – i) •Q = Vrms Irms sin (v – i) •S = P + j Q•= Vrms Irms [cos (v – i) + j sin (v – i)] •P = P + P cos [2(t + v)] •Q = Q sin [2(t + v)] •AC Power •S = P + j Q•= Vrms Irms [cos (v – i) + j sin (v – i)] cos j sin e j •S = Vrms Irms e j(v – i) •= Vrms Irms e j(v) e j(– i) •S = Vrms e j(v) Irms e j(– i) •= Vrms v Irms – i •S = V I* •Complex Conjugate •Power Triangle •Our electrical system must handle this component. •Total or Apparent Power •S •kVA • •Real Power •P •kW •This component of the power furnishes the energy required to establish and maintain electric and magnetic fields. •Reactive Power •Q •kVAR •THEREFORE, VARS REDUCE THE “USEFULNESS” OF THE TOTAL ELECTRIC POWER. •cos Power Factor •This is the only “useful” work done. •Power Triangle • •Power triangle in first quadrant (positive ) •indicates INDUCTIVE load. •Power Triangle • •Power triangle in fourth quadrant (negative ) •indicates CAPACITIVE load. •Power Triangle •Z •S •Q • •X •R •R = resistance •P •X = reactance •Z = impedance •Power triangle and impedance triangle are •SIMILAR TRIANGLES. • •Three-Phase Systems •Three-phase systems • Most common: 3-wire delta and 4-wire wye •Mathematical representation • Time domain (oscilloscope view) • Frequency domain (phasor diagram) •Three-Phase Systems Positive Sequence (A-B-C) A B C A B C A B C A A time C Time Domain B Frequency Domain •Three-Phase Systems Negative Sequence (A-C-B) A C B A C B A C B A A time B Time Domain C Frequency Domain •Three-Phase Systems •Delta-connected loads • Line-to-line voltage only • No neutral, so best for balanced loads • Ideal for motors •Wye-connected loads • Line-to-line AND line-to-neutral voltage • Better for imbalanced loads, particularly mix of three-phase and single-phase •Mathematical Relationships •P = |V| |I| cos •Q = |V| |I| sin •S = V I* •* denotes COMPLEX CONJUGATE •Recommendation: •For three-phase systems, use LINE-TO-LINE voltages and THREE-PHASE POWER values. •Alternatively, LINE-TO-NEUTRAL voltages and POWER PER PHASE. A Simple Derivation A Simple Derivation Based on the definition for the average power: Power inT AC Circuits efinition for the average power: T 1 1 P = ! p(t)dt = ! VM I M cos(! t + ² v )cos(! t + ² i )dt = T 0 Based on the definition forTthe average power: 0 1 P= T 1 = T T ! 0 T 11T 1 cos(!² vt ²+ ²²iv))cos( + cos(2 p(t)dt== ! VVMMIIMM [cos( ! t! +t +² i²)dt v + ²=i )] dt = TT 0 02 ! 1 1 = VM I M cos(! v ² ! i ) ! 2 VM I M [ cos( 2 ² v ² ² i ) + cos(2! t + ² v + ² i )] dt = 0 T 1 = VM I M cos(! v ² ! i ) 2 Therefore: 1 P = VM I M [ cos(! v ! ! i )] 2 Therefore: 1 using P = VM I M [or cos( ! v ! the ! i )]RMS values: 2 P = VRMS I RMS [ cos(! v ! ! i )] Based on the definition for the average power: Power inT AC Circuits efinition for the average power: T 1 1 P = ! p(t)dt = ! VM I M cos(! t + ² v )cos(! t + ² i )dt = T 0 Based on the definition forTthe average power: 0 1 P= T 1 = T T ! 0 T 11T 1 cos(!² vt ²+ ²²iv))cos( + cos(2 p(t)dt== ! VVMMIIMM [cos( ! t! +t +² i²)dt v + ²=i )] dt = TT 0 02 ! 1 1 = VM I M cos(! v ² ! i ) ! 2 VM I M [ cos( 2 ² v ² ² i ) + cos(2! t + ² v + ² i )] dt = 0 T 1 = VM I M cos(! v ² ! i ) 2 Therefore: 1 P = VM I M [ cos(! v ! ! i )] 2 Therefore: 1 using P = VM I M [or cos( ! v ! the ! i )]RMS values: 2 P = VRMS I RMS [ cos(! v ! ! i )] EXAMPLES