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Key Words: I-V Relationship For R, L and C, Power Conversion

This document discusses phasor relationships for resistors, inductors and capacitors in sinusoidal steady state analysis. It describes the current-voltage relationships for each component in both the time and frequency domains. Equations are provided for impedance, reactance, power, energy and reactive power for inductors and capacitors.

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Katiyar Rahul
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views18 pages

Key Words: I-V Relationship For R, L and C, Power Conversion

This document discusses phasor relationships for resistors, inductors and capacitors in sinusoidal steady state analysis. It describes the current-voltage relationships for each component in both the time and frequency domains. Equations are provided for impedance, reactance, power, energy and reactive power for inductors and capacitors.

Uploaded by

Katiyar Rahul
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C

Key Words:

I-V Relationship for R, L and C,

Power conversion
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Resistor v~i relationship for a resistor

v  Vm sin  t
i
 Suppose
 +

R v Vm

v i  sin t  I m sin t
S
R R
_

V
v、i Relationship between RMS: I 
R
v
Wave and Phasor diagrams:

i
I 
t 

V
V
I
R
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Resistor  Time domain frequency domain

Vm e j ( wt  )  RI m e j ( wt  )
v(t )  Vm cos(wt   )
Vm e j  RI m e j
i (t )  I m cos(wt   )
Vm   RI m 
V  RI

With a resistor θ﹦φ, v(t) and i(t) are in phase .


Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Resistor  Power
i
 • Transient Power
+
p  vi  Vm sin t  I m sin t  I mVm sin t
2
R

1  cos 2t   IV  IV cos 2t


v I mVm

_ 2
 Note: I and V are RMS values. p0

v、i • Average Power


v
0 pdt T 0VI 1  cos 2t dt  VI
1 T 1 T
P=IV P
i T
t V2
P  IV  I R  2

R
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Resistor

v  311sin 314t,
P1.4 , R=10,Find i and P。

 220V 
Vm 311
V 
2 2

 22 A
V 220
I 
R 10

i  22 2 sin 314t P  IV  220  22  4840W 


Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Inductor  v ~ i relationship
di
v  v AB L
dt
Suppose i  I m sin t

di d I m sin t 
vL L  I mL cos  t
dt dt

 I mL sin t  90 
 Vm sin t  90 
1 t
i   vdt  L vdt  L 0 vdt i0  0 vdt
1 t 1 0 1 t
L  L
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C

Inductor  v~i relationship

 I mL sin  t  90   Vm sin t  90 


di
vL
dt
Vm  I mL
Relationship between RMS: V  IL

I
V
X L  L  2fL  
L

XL  f

For DC,f = 0,XL = 0.

v(t) leads i(t) by 90º, or i(t) lags v(t) by 90º


Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C

Inductor v~i relationship


i(t) = Im ejt

di
v (t )  L  I m jLe jt  jLi(t )
dt
Represent v(t) and i(t) as phasors: V  jLI
 
I  V  V
jL jX L
• The derivative in the relationship between v(t) and i(t) becomes a
multiplication by j in the relationship between V and I .
• The time-domain differential equation has become the algebraic equation in the
frequency-domain.
• Phasors allow us to express current-voltage relationships for inductors and
capacitors in a way such as we express the current-voltage relationship for a
resistor.
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Inductor  v ~ i relationship

Wave and Phasor diagrams:


V  jIX L
v、i
v V
eL
i

t

I
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Inductor  Power
p  vi  Vm sin t  90 I m sin t  Vm I m cos t  sin t
Vm I m P
 sin 2t VI sin 2t
2
t i 1
0 0
Energy stored:W  vidt  Lidi  Li 2
2
+ +
1 t
Wmax  LI m2  LI 2 - -
2
v、i
Average Power P  1 1 T
T

T 0
pdt   VI sin 2tdt  0
T 0 v
V2 i
Reactive Power Q  IV  I X L 
2
(Var)
XL
t
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Inductor

P1.5,L = 10mH,v = 100sint,Find iL when f = 50Hz and 50kHz.


X L  2fL  2  50  10  10 3  3.14

 22.5 A
V 100 / 2
I 50  
XL 3.14

iL t   22.5 2 sin t  90 A
X L  2fL  2  50  10 3  10  10 3  3140

 22.5mA
V 100 / 2
I 50k  
XL 3.14

iL t   22.5 2 sin t  90 mA 
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Capacitor  v ~ i relationship
dq dv
i i C
 dt dt
+ I m CVm
Suppose: v  Vm sin t
v C

i  CVm cos t  CVm sin t  90   I m sin t  90 
1 t 1 0 1 t 1 t
_
 v   idt   idt   idt  v0   idt
c  c  c 0 c 0
Relationship between RMS: I  CV  V  V
1 XC
C
XC 
1

1

C 2fC
1
XC  For DC,f = 0, XC  
f
i(t) leads v(t) by 90º, or v(t) lags i(t) by 90º
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Capacitor  v ~ i relationship

i v(t) = Vm ejt

+
dv(t ) dVm e j t
i (t )  C C  jCVm e j t
v C dt dt
V
Represent v(t) and i(t) as phasors: I = jωCV =
_ jX C

• The derivative in the relationship between v(t) and i(t) becomes a


multiplication by j in the relationship between V and I .
• The time-domain differential equation has become the algebraic equation in the
frequency-domain.
• Phasors allow us to express current-voltage relationships for inductors and
capacitors much like we express the current-voltage relationship for a resistor.
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Capacitor v~i relationship

Wave and Phasor diagrams:


V   jI X C
v、i
I
i
v

t

V
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Capacitor Power

p  vi  Vm sin t  I m sin t  90  


Vm I m
sin 2t  VI sin 2t
2
P
Energy stored:
t v dv v 1
W   vidt   v  C   dt   Cvdv  Cv 2
0 0 dt 0 2 + +
1
Wmax  CVm2  CV 2 t
2 - -

Average Power: P=0 v、i


i
V 2
v
Reactive Power Q  IV  I X C 
2 (Var)
XC
t
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Capacitor

P1.7,Suppose C=20F,AC source v=100sint,Find XC and I for f = 50Hz


and 50kHz。

1 1
f  50Hz  X c    159
C 2fC
V V
I  m  1.38A
Xc 2Xc

 0.159
1 1
f  50KHz  X c  
C 2fC

 1380A 
V Vm
I  
Xc 2Xc
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Review (v-I relationship)

Time domain Frequency domain

R
v  R i V  R  I , v and i are in phase.

di
vL  L V  jL  I , X L  L , v leads i by 90°.
L dt

dv 1  1
vC  C V  I , XC  , v lags i by 90°.
C dt jC C
Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis

1.3 Phasor Relationships for R, L and C


Summary

 R: XR  R   0

L: X L  L  2fL  f    v  i 
2
C: 1 1 1 
XC       v  i  
c 2fc f 2
 V  IX

 Frequency characteristics of an Ideal Inductor and Capacitor:


A capacitor is an open circuit to DC currents;
A Inducter is a short circuit to DC currents.

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