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Lecture 2

This document discusses active, reactive, and complex power in electrical circuits. It defines real and reactive power, apparent power, power factor, and explores power calculations using phasor representations. An example circuit problem calculates the current, powers, and power factor for an LC filter circuit with a resistive load.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views14 pages

Lecture 2

This document discusses active, reactive, and complex power in electrical circuits. It defines real and reactive power, apparent power, power factor, and explores power calculations using phasor representations. An example circuit problem calculates the current, powers, and power factor for an LC filter circuit with a resistive load.

Uploaded by

prjeetus
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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ECE 330

POWER CIRCUITS AND ELECTROMECHANICS

LECTURE 2
ACTIVE, REACTIVE, AND COMPLEX POWER

Acknowledgment-These handouts and lecture notes given in class are based on material from Prof. Peter
Sauer’s ECE 330 lecture notes. Some slides are taken from Ali Bazi’s presentations

Disclaimer- These handouts only provide highlights and should not be used to replace the course textbook.
8/30/2017
Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
TWO-TERMINAL NETWORK
• A two-terminal electrical network has voltage at its
terminals and current flowing in and out of its
terminals. i(t) i(t)

+ Load + Source
v(t) Notation v(t) Notation
- -

• The instantaneous power is p (t )  v (t ) i (t ).


• For i (t )  I m cos( t  i ) A and v (t ) V m cos( t  v ) V
we get
p (t ) V m I m cos( t  v ) cos( t  i )
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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
TWO-TERMINAL NETWORK

1
cos  cos   [cos(   )+ cos(   )]
2

VmIm VmIm
p (t )  cos(v  i )+ cos(2 t  v  i ) W
2 2

The first term is time-independent, while the second


term is a sinusoid at double frequency.

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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
TWO-TERMINAL NETWORK
• The average power is thus
T
1
P   P (t ) d (t ) 2
, T 
T 0 
Vm I m
Pin  cos( v  i ).
2
• This is called the active or real power and its unit is
watts (W).
• The power factor is the cosine of the phase angle
between v (t) and i(t).
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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
POWER FACTOR

• The power factor (P.F.) is thus P.F .  cos(v  i ).


• The power factor can be:
– Lagging: 0o  v  i  90o
– Leading: 90o  v  i  0o
– Unity:  v  i  0
Therefore, 0  P.F.  1 ,
and the highest real power
exists when P.F.=1. Source: grupovision.com
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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
APPARENT POWER AND REACTIVE POWER

VmIm
• The apparent power is S 
2
• The apparent power unit is volt-amps (VA).
Vm I m
• The reactive power is Qin  sin( v  i ).
2
• The reactive power unit is volt-amps-reactive

(VARs).

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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
COMPLEX POWER
• The instantaneous power is
VmIm VmIm
p (t )  cos(v  i )+ cos(2 t  v  i ) W
2 2
• The time varying component
VmIm VmIm
cos (2 t  v  i )  cos[ (2 t  2i )  (v  i )]
2 2
VmIm VmIm
 cos (2 t  2i ) cos (v  i )  sin (2 t  2i )sin (v  i )
2 2

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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
COMPLEX POWER
• Define
VmIm
Q in  sin(v  i ), (Reactive power)
2
p (t )  Pin  Pin cos(2 t  2 i )  Q in sin(2 t   i )
 Pin (1  cos(2 t  i ))  Q in sin(2 t  2i )

• The real power can be written as

VmIm
Pin  cos(v  i )  Vrms I rms cos(v  i )
2
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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
PHASOR REPRESENTATION
Vm I m jv  ji j v  ji
Pin  Re{ e e }  Re{Vrms e I rms e }
2
• The reactive power can be written as
Vm I m jv  ji
Qin  Im{ e e }  Im{Vrms e jv I rms e  ji }
2
• The voltages and currents can be written as phasors:
jv ji
Vrms e  V and I rms e I.
Pin  Re(V I  )  Vrms I rms cos(v  i )
Qin  Im(V I  )  Vrms I rms sin(v  i )
Source: Tonex.com
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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
Complex Power
• Define the complex power as S  Pin  jQin
• Then S can be written as S  V I *
• The quantity I * is the complex conjugate of I .
• S can also be written as
S  S (v  i )
• Note that
S
Qin
VmIm
S   Pin2  Q in2 (v  i )
2 Pin
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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
ALTERNATE FORMS OF COMPLEX POWER

• If the load is Z  R  jX , connected across the source V


By Ohm’s law: V  Z I , but S V I *
Then S can be written as S  I 2 R  jI 2 X Also,
P  I 2 R and Q  I 2 X , Z and P.F .  cos(angle( Z )).
• Thus, Q > 0 when Z is inductive, X   L
1
and Q < 0 when is capacitive, X  
C
• S and Z are not phasors but complex quantities.
8/30/2017 11
Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
EXAMPLE: LC FILTER AND R LOAD
• The circuit shown is commonly used as an LC filter
to supply a load, which is resistive in this case.
• Find the current, real, reactive, and complex powers,
and the P.F. for v(t )  2Vrms cos(377t )
L
 j 
Z  j L   R / /  +
  C  v(t)
i(t)
C R
-
 L  j ( 2 RLC  R)
Z
 RC  j
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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
EXAMPLE: LC FILTER AND R LOAD
• Let
Vrms  120V , L  1mH, C  6.8mF, and R  10.
Z  0.0197  39.41o  0.0152  j 0.0125
V 1200o
I    6091.4 39.41o
A
Z 0.0197  39.41o

i (t )  6091.4 2 cos(377t  39.41o ) L

S  V I *  731  39.41o kVA +


i(t)
v(t) C R
Pin  731cos( 39.41o )  564.8kW -

Qin  731sin( 39.41 )  464.1kVAR


o

P.F.= cos( 39.41o )  0.773 leading ( v  i  39.41o )


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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan
READING MATERIAL

• Reading material: Chapter 2 sections 2.1 – 2.3.

• Recommended reading for next time: section 2.4.

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Copyright © 2017 Hassan Sowidan

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