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Power Formulas Circuits

The document discusses power formulas for AC circuits. It provides formulas for instantaneous, average, and reactive power in circuits with sinusoidal voltages and currents. It also discusses power factor, apparent power, complex power, RMS values, and power calculations for balanced three-phase circuits. Design considerations for maximum power transfer to resistive and reactive loads are presented.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
90 views2 pages

Power Formulas Circuits

The document discusses power formulas for AC circuits. It provides formulas for instantaneous, average, and reactive power in circuits with sinusoidal voltages and currents. It also discusses power factor, apparent power, complex power, RMS values, and power calculations for balanced three-phase circuits. Design considerations for maximum power transfer to resistive and reactive loads are presented.

Uploaded by

HelpEachOther
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ECE 3364 Circuits II Power Formulas (front)

Instantaneous power p (t ) = v(t ) * i (t )


In AC-circuits
v(t ) = v m cos(ω 0 t + θ v ) and i (t ) = i m cos(ω 0 t + θ i ) Inductors: θ v − θ i = π / 2 . Capacitors: θ v − θ i = − π / 2

cos(θ v − θ i )[1 + cos(2ω0 t )] − m m sin(θ v − θ i ) sin( 2ω0 t ) v ⋅ a where i (t ) is the 0° reference


vm im v i
p(t ) =
2 2
p (t ) = m m cos(θ v − θ i )[1 + cos(2ω0 t + θ v + θ i )] v ⋅ a where θ v & θ i can be referenced with respect to any 0° reference
v i
2
v i v i
Average power P = m m cos(θ v − θ i ) watts Reactive power Q = m m sin(θ v − θ i ) var s
2 2
Power factor angle pfa = θ v − θ i Power factor pf = cos(θ v − θ i ) Reactive factor rf = sin(θ v − θ i )
Lagging (current-phase lags voltage-phase) θ v > θ i leading (current-phase leads voltage-phase) θ v < θ i
v i
RMS values v rms = m and i rms = m so that P = v rms i rms cos(θ v − θ i ) watts
2 2
Note: "rms" and "effective" are synonymous, so you often see v eff instead of v rms , etc.
~ ~ ~ 2 ~ 2
Complex power S = P + jQ v⋅a Apparent power S = P2 + Q2 v⋅a S = Vrms I rms * = Vrms / Z * = I rms Z
v i v i
S = m m e (θv −θi ) = m m ∠(θ v − θ i ) v ⋅ a P = S cos(θ v − θ i ) watts Q = S sin(θ v − θ i ) var s
2 2
Given S , a lagging pf , P =| S | pf watts and Q = S sin( + cos −1 ( pf )) var s
Given S , a leading pf , P =| S | pf watts and Q = S sin( − cos −1 ( pf )) var s
In phasor notation (AC-circuits)
~ ~ ~ v ~ i
V = v m ∠θ v and I = i m ∠θ i or in RMS units V rms = m ∠θ v = v rms ∠θ v and I rms = m ∠θ i = i rms ∠θ i
2 2

( )
~ ~* ~
v m im V I ~ ~ * | V rms | 2 ~
S= ∠(θ v − θ i ) = = V rms I rms v⋅a = = | I rms | 2 Z Load
2 2 *
( Z Load )
Balanced 3-phase circuits (AC)
Pos phase seq: V BN = (1.0∠ − 120°) V AN ; VCN = (1.0∠ + 120°) V AN and V BC = [1.0∠ − 120°]V AB ; VCA = [1.0∠ + 120°]V AB
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Neg phase seq: V BN = (1.0∠ + 120°) V AN ; VCN = (1.0∠ − 120°) V AN and V BC = [1.0∠ + 120°]V AB ; VCA = [1.0∠ − 120°]V AB
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Pos phase seq: V AB =


~
( ~
)
3∠ + 30° V AN
~ ⎛
I AB = ⎜⎜
1 ⎞~
∠ + 30° ⎟⎟ I aA
~ ~
note: I AN = I aA
⎝ 3 ⎠

Neg phase seq: V AB =


~
( ~
)
3∠ − 30° V AN
~ ⎛
I AB = ⎜⎜
1 ⎞~
∠ − 30° ⎟⎟ I aA
⎝ 3 ⎠
~ rms ~ rms
PAY −load = V AN I aA cos(θ VAN − θ I aA ) = PBY −load = PCY −load watts PTTL = 3 PA
~ rms ~ rms
Q YA −load = V AN I aA sin(θ VAN − θ I aA ) = Q BY −load = QCY −load var s QTTL = 3 Q A

S A = V AN I aA ( )
~ rms ~ rms * ~ rms ~ rms
= V AN I aA ∠(θ VAN − θ I aA ) = S B = S C
Voltage source transformation: Y → Δ and Δ → Y
a
ZY
a’
a
vab’
Y →Δ: v ab' = ( 3∠ + 30o )va'n Z Δ = 3 ZY
va’n +
+
-

-
n vca’ a’ b’ ZΔ ⎛ 1 ⎞ 1
-
+ +- vb’n -
+ Δ → Y : v a 'n = ⎜⎜ ∠ − 30 o ⎟⎟ v ab' ZY = Z Δ
vc’n c’ ⎝ 3 ⎠ 3
c
+

For Y → Δ load transformation, just let voltages =0


-

b b
vbc’ For Δ → Y load transformation, just let voltages=0
c
ECE 3364 Circuits II Power Formulas (back)

Currents/Voltages at the load

VCA VCN I cC VBC I bB


VAB I BC I aA
30° I CA 30°
30° 30° VBN
VAN 30° 30°
I AB
30° I AB VAN 30°
VBN 30° 30° I CA
30° 30°
VBC I bB I BC I aA VCA VAB
VCN I cC
Positive phase sequence Negative phase sequence

Design of a load impedance Z L = RL + jX L for maximum power transfer to the load.

Z th=R th+jX th
Case 1: Both R L and X L can be chosen without any constraints. Choose Z L = ( Z th ) * .
Case 2: Constrained. a ≤ R L ≤ b and c ≤ X L ≤ d . Step 1: Choose X L as near to
Vth +
X L = ( X th ) * as c ≤ X L ≤ d permits. Step 2: choose R L as near to - ZL =R L+jX L
RL = (Rth )2 + ( X th + X L )2
as a ≤ R L ≤ b permits.
Case 3: Z L = Z L ∠θ Z L where θ Z L is specified and cannot be changed, and Z L can be chosen by the circuit
designer. Choose Z L = Z th

Design of a series-impedance Z d = R d + jX d for maximum power transfer to the load.


Case 1: Both Rd and X d can be chosen without any constraints. Z th=R th+jX th Zd =R d +jX d
Choose Rd = 0 . Choose X d so that (X th + X d + X L ) = 0
Case 2: Constrained. a ≤ Rd ≤ b and c ≤ X d ≤ d . Step 1: choose Rd as near to 0 Vth +
-
as a ≤ Rd ≤ b permits. Step 2: Choose X d so that (X th + X d + X L ) is as near to 0
ZL =R L+jX L
as c ≤ X d ≤ d permits.
Case 3: Z d = Z d ∠θ Z d where θ Z d is specified and cannot be changed, and Z d can be chosen by the circuit
[ ]
designer. Choose Z d = − ( Rth + R L ) cos θ Z d + ( X th+ X L ) sin θ Z d if it yields a value Z d > 0 , else choose
Rd = X d = 0

Wattmeters

+ cc1 + A
+ cc1 A
pc1 3 3
B phase B phase
load + load
pc2
pc1
+ cc2 + C C

~ rms ~ rms ⎛ ⎞
wattmeter reading = Vαβ I γδ cos⎜θ vαβ −θ i ⎟ PTTL = W1 + W2 QTTL = 3 W1
⎝ γδ ⎠

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