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CL Chapter11

Chapter 11 of the Electric Engineering course at Chungbuk National University focuses on AC Power Analysis, covering key concepts such as instantaneous and average power, maximum power transfer, effective values, apparent power, power factor, and complex power. It provides mathematical definitions and relationships between these concepts, along with examples to illustrate their application. The chapter emphasizes the importance of power analysis in electrical systems and offers insights into optimizing power delivery and efficiency.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views9 pages

CL Chapter11

Chapter 11 of the Electric Engineering course at Chungbuk National University focuses on AC Power Analysis, covering key concepts such as instantaneous and average power, maximum power transfer, effective values, apparent power, power factor, and complex power. It provides mathematical definitions and relationships between these concepts, along with examples to illustrate their application. The chapter emphasizes the importance of power analysis in electrical systems and offers insights into optimizing power delivery and efficiency.

Uploaded by

phinhan2002
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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Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II

The second semester


Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon
11. 1 Introduction
- Power analysis will be done in this chapter
- Power is the most important quantity in electric utilities, electronic,
and communication systems, etc.

11.2 Instantaneous and Average Power


□ Definition of Instanteneous power
The instantaneous power (in watts) is the power at any instant of time
p (t ) = v(t )i (t )
- It is the rate at which an element absorbs energy.

□ The general case of instantaneous power

Figure 11.1 Sinusoidal source and passive linear circuit


v(t ) = Vm cos(wt + q v )
i (t ) = I m cos(wt + q i )

Then,

p (t ) = v(t )i (t ) = Vm I m cos(wt + q v ) cos(wt + q i )


1
¯ cos A cos B = [cos( A - B ) + cos( A + B )]
2
1 1
= Vm I m cos(q v - q i ) + Vm I m cos(2wt + q v + q i )
2 4442444
1 3 1 2 4444244443
time independent Freq . is twice the source signal

=> p(t) changes with time and is difficult to measure it.

1
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon
□ Average power
The average power, in watts, is the average of the instantaneous power
over one period
1 T
P= ò p (t )dt
T 0

1 1
¯ p (t ) = Vm I m cos(q v - q i ) + Vm I m cos(2wt + q v + q i )
2 2
1 T1 1 T 1
P= ò Vm I m cos(q v - q i )dt + ò Vm I m cos(2wt + q v + q i )dt
T 20 T 0 2
1
= Vm I m cos(q v - q i )
2
□ Phase representation of Average Power
Note that

V = Vm Ðq v = Vm (cos q v + j sin q v ), I = I m Ðq i = I m (cos q i + j sin q i )


.
V I * = Vm I m Ð(q v - q i ) = Vm I m (cos(q v - q i ) + j sin(q v - q i ))

Then,
1 1
P = Vm I m cos(q v - q i ) = Vm I m Re{cos(q v - q i ) + j sin(q v - q i )}
2 2
1
= Re{VI *}
2
□ Special Case

(1) q v = q i : Purely resistive circuit

1 1 1 2 2
P = Vm I m = I 2 m R = I R ( I = I ´ I * )
2 2 2

(2) q v - q i = ±90o : Purely reactive circuit

1
P = Vm I m cos(q v - q i ) = 0
2

2
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon
<Ex 11.4> Determine the average power at each elements

3
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon
11.3 Maximum Average Power Transfer

□ Maximum Power Transfer

- Given parameter: VTh , ZTh = RTh + jX Th

- Variable : Z L = RL + jX L
- Objective : Maximize the power absorbed in Z L = RL + jX L
1 2
P = I RL
2
VTh VTh
¯I= =
Z Th + Z L ( RTh + RL ) + j ( X Th + X L )
2
1 VTh
= RL
2 ( RTh + RL ) 2 + ( X Th + X L ) 2
Our objective is to find the load parameters RL and X L so that P
¶P ¶P
is maximum. To do this, we set and as zero.
¶X L ¶RL
2
¶P VTh RL ( X Th + X L )
=- 2
¶X L é( RTh + RL )2 + ( X Th + X L )2 ù
ë û
=> X L = - X Th
2 2 2
¶P V [( RTh + RL ) + ( X Th + X L ) - 2 RL ( RTh + RL )]
= Th
¶RL 2 2 2
2 é( RTh + RL ) + ( X Th + X L ) ù
ë û
2 2
=> ( RTh + RL ) + ( X Th + X L ) - 2 RL ( RTh + RL ) = 0
2
=> RTh2 - RL2 + ( X Th + X L ) = 0
2
=> RL = RTh2 + ( X Th + X L )

4
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon

This results leads to


2 2 2
1 VTh 1 VTh RTh VTh
Pmax = 2 2
RL = =
2 ( RTh + RL ) + ( X Th + X L ) 2 4 R 2 Th 8 RTh

<Ex. 11.5> Determine the load impedance that maximize the average
power absorbed in Z L and calculate the maximum average power
delivered to Z L ?

(Fig 11.8)

<Ex. 11.6> Find the value of RL that will absorb the maximum average

power. Calculate that power.

5
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon
11.4 Effective or RMS Value
The effective value of a periodic current is the dc current that delivers
the same average power to a resistor as the periodic current
1 T
Paverage = ò i 2 Rdt = I 2 eff R
T 0

1 T
=> I eff = ò i 2 dt = I rms (root - mean - square)
T 0

1 T
=> Veff = ò v 2 dt = Vrms
T 0

For the sinusoid i (t ) = I m cos(wt ) , I rms can be obtained as

1 T I m2 T 1 I
I rms = ò
2
m
2
I cos (wt )dt = ò (1 + cos(2wt ))dt = m .
T 0 T 0 2 2

Note that
1
P = Vm I m cos(q v - q i ) = Vrms I rms cos(q v - q i ) .
2
The average power absorbed by a resistor R can be written as
2
P = I rms 2
R = Vrms /R.

<Ex 11.7> Determine the rms value of the current waveform in Fig.11.14.
If the current is passed through a 2W resistor, find the average power
absorbed by the resistor.

<Fig.11.14>

6
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon
11.5 Apparent Power and Power Factor
□ Definition of Apparent Power and Power Factor
1
P = Vm I m cos(q v - q i ) = Vrms I rms cos(q v - q i )
2
S = Vrms I rms : Apparent Power (VA)
Power Factor : cos(q v - q i )
P
pf = (Dimensionless)
S
□ Power factor angle

The angle q v - q i is called the power factor angle

Property: Power factor angle is equal to the angle of the load impedance
V V Ðq V
Z = = m v = m Ð(q v - q i )
I I m Ðq i Im
2Vrms Ðq v Vrms
= = Ð(q v - q i )
2 I rms Ðq i I rms
Purely resistive load: pf=1
Purely reactive load: pf=0
pf is also said to leading or lagging
leading: current leads voltage – a capacitive load
lagging: current lags voltage – a inductive load
<Ex 11.10> Determine the power factor of the entire circuit of Fig. 11.18
as seen by the source. Calculate the average power delivered by the
source.

<Fig.11.18>

7
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon
11.6 Complex Power
□ Motivation of introducing complex power
Complex power concept, which contains all the information pertaining to
the power absorbed by a given load, is introduced to find the total
effect of parallel loads.
1 *
S= VI = Vrms I * rms = Vrms I rms Ð(q v - q i )
2
= Vrms I rms cos(q v - q i ) + jVrms I rms sin (q v - q i )
□ Load impedance representation of complex power
Note that
V V
Z = = rms Ð(q v - q i ) => Vrms = ZI rms
I I rms
Then, we have
2
2 Vrms
S = I rms Z= = Vrms I *rms
Z*
2
= I rms ( R + jX )
= P + jQ
2
P : Re{S} = I rms R (VA) = Vrms I rms cos(q v - q i )
2
Q : Im{S} = I rms X (VAR) = Vrms I rms sin(q v - q i )

1. Q = 0 for resistive loads (unity pf)


2. Q < 0 for capacitive loads (leading pf)
3. Q > 0 for inductive loads (lagging pf)

1 *
Complex Power = S = P + jQ = VI = Vrms I rms Ð(q v - q i )
2

Apparent Power = S = S = Vrms I rms = P 2 + Q 2

Real Power =P = Re{S} = S cos(q v - q i )


Reactive Power = Q = Im{S} = S sin (q v - q i )

P
Power Factor= = cos(q v - q i )
S

8
Chungbuk National University Electric Engineering – Circuit Theory II
The second semester
Chapter 11- AC Power Analysis
Written by Ohmin Kwon

<Power triangle><Impedance triangle>

<Ex. 11.11>

11.7 Conservation of AC Power


11.8 Power Factor Correction
11.9 Applications

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