SEMINAR
ON
 SINGLE PHASE AC
CIRCUITS ANALYSIS
                                 Presented by:
                                Pranav Gupta
                                    Roll No. 5
                                    Section C
                                Branch: CIVIL
 Graphic Era University, Dehradun
            April, 2016
    CONTENTS
       1. AC CIRCUIT
1.1 PURELY RESISTIVE CICUIT
1.2 PURELY INDUCTIVE CIRCUIT
1.3 PURELY CAPACITIVE CIRCUIT
   AC SERIES CIRCUITS
   1.4 SERIES R-L CIRCUIT
   1.5 SERIES R-C CIRCUIT
   1.6 SERIES R-L-C CIRCUIT
            CONTENTS
•             2. RESONANCE
•            2.1 RESONANCE IN SERIES
•            2.2 RESONANCE IN PARALLEL
•            2.3 RESONANCE FREQUENCY
VARIATION OF DIFF. QUANTITIES WITH
 FREQUENCY
             2.5 INDUCTIVE REACTANCE
             2.6 CAPACITIVE REACTANCE
             2.7 CURRENT
Introduction
AC CIRCUIT:
 Circuits in which currents and voltages vary
 sinusoidally i,e vary with time are called
 alternating current or a.c circuits. All a.c circuits
 are made up of combination of resistance R ,
 inductance L and capacitance C. The circuit
 elements R,L and C are called circuit parameters .
 To study a general a.c circuit it is necessary to
 consider the effect of each seperately.
      1.1 Purely Resistive Circuits
• Figure shows a circuit containing only resistance R
• v = Vm sin ωt
• By Ohm’s law, the instantaneous current in the circuit will be
• i =v/R =Vm sinωt / R
• Vm^/ R = Im
• i=Im sinωt
• Comparison of voltage equation and current shows that the phase difference
  are in phase difference between voltage and current is zero . Hence , in a
  circuit with resistance only the voltage and current are in phase with each
  other .
 The waveform and phase diagram respectively of
the voltage and current in a circuit containing only a
                    resistance .
     Since maximum value = √2 * r.m.s. Value
                        Im = √2 I: Vm = √2 V
                               √2 V/R = √2 I
                                V = RI
         Above eq=n represents ohm’s law
It is noted that applied voltage is counter balanced
 by the voltage drop across the resistance R . This
  voltage drop is called resistive voltage drop and
                   denoted by Vr .
                                   Vr = V
                                   Vr = IR
    1.2 Purely Inductive Circuit
• Consider a purely inductive circuit containing only an inductance L
    . Let the current taken by the circuit be
                            I = Imsinωt
  This current produces a self induced e.m.f. eL
   in the circuit given by
                     eL= -L di/dt
   At any instant two voltages are present in the circuit , one is the
    applied voltage eL . By KVL
           v = - eL = L di/dt = L d(Imsin ωt)/dt
             = ωLImcosωt = ωLImsin(ωt+ 900)
  If ωLIm = Vm
          v = Vm sin(ωt+ 900)
   Comparison shows that the phase difference between voltage and
    current is 90 .
• If Φ is measured from the current phase Φ =
  +900 .
• Hence , in a purely inductive circuit the
  voltage leads the current by 900 or the
  current lags by 900.
• The waveform and phasor diagram
  respectively of the voltage and current
  containing only on inductance .
  Inductive Reactance
                ωL(    I I) =   V
                 ωL = V/I
The quantity ωL is the ratio of the r.m.s. voltage
 to r.m.s. current in purely inductive circuit . It
 is called the inductive reactance of the circuit
 and is denoted by the symbol XL . Since it is the
 ratio of voltage and current it is measured in
 ohms .
  The opposition of inductance to the flow of
  alternating current is defined as the inductive
  reatance XL .
                 XL = ωL
                    = 2 πfL
 Also ,          V = XL I
The voltage drop across the inductance L
is called the inductive voltage drop . It is
denoted by VL .
                  VL = V
                  VL = XL I
     1.3 Purely Capacitive circuit
• Consider a purely capacitive circuit containing only a
  capacitor C connected to an a.c. Supply voltage given
  by
•                            v= Vmsin ωt
• The current in the circuit at any instant is
•                       i =dq/dt
•                       i =d (Cv)/dt = C dv/dt = C d(Vm
  sinωt)/dt
•                         = ωCVm cos ωt = ωCVm
  sin(ωt+900)
•                 ωCVm^ = Im
•                       i = Im sin(ωt+900)
Comparison shows that the phase difference Φ
between the voltage and the current is 900. if Φ
   is measured from the voltage phasor Φ =
+900.Hence in purely capacitive circuit current
 leads the voltage by 900.The waveforms and
   phasor diagram respectively for a circuit
         containing capacitance alone.
         Capacitive
         Reactance
•           ωC( √2V)= √2I
•                V/I=1/ωC
•     The ratio of r.m.s. Voltage to r.m.s. Current in a purely
  capacitive circuit is called the capacitive reactance. It is defined as
  the opposition offered by a purely capacitive circuit to the flow of
  sinusoidal current. The capacitive reactance is denoted by Xc and
  is measured in ohms.
•              Xc= 1/ωC= 1/2πfC
•                      V/I= X
•                        V= XcI
• The part of the supply which charges the capacitor is known as
  the capacititve voltage drop.
•                      Vc= V
•                      Vc= XcI
            1.4 Series R-L Circuit
• Consider a circuit containing a resistance R and an
  inductance L in series
•            Let V = supply voltage
•                I = circuit current
•               VR = voltage drop across R = RI
•               VL = voltage drop across L = XLI= 2πfLI
•                ΦL = phase angle between I and V
• Since I is common to both elements R and L,this is used as
  reference phasor. The voltage VR is in phase with I and VL
  leads by 900 . The voltage V is the phasor sum of VR and VL
  that is the phasor diagram:
• The triangle having VR,VL and V as its sides is
  called voltage triangle for a series R-L circuit:
• The phase angle ΦL between the supply voltage
  V and the circuit current I is the angle between
  the hypotenuse and the side VR .It is seen that
  the current I is lagging behind the voltage V in
  an R-L circuit.
•                  V 2 = V2 R + V 2 L
•                      = (RI)2 + (XL I)2
•               V2/I2 = R2 + X2L
•                 V/I = √(R2 + X2L)
•                  ZL = √(R2 + X2L)
• ZL is called the impedance of a series R-l circuit
•                      ZL = V/I
•                       V = ZL I
Impedance Triangle for a Series R-
            L Circuit
 • If the length of each side of the voltage triangle
   is divided by current I , the impedance triangle
   is obtained . The impedance triangle for a
   series R-L circuit is given. The following
   results may be found from an impedance
   triangle for a series R-L circuit:
 •             ZL = √(R2 + X2L)
 •              R = ZLcosΦL
 •             XL = ZL sinΦL
 •          tanΦL = XL /R
 1.5 Series R-C
     Circuit
• A circuit containing a resistance R and a
  capacitance C in series
• Let V = supply voltage
•       I = circuit current
•      VR = voltage drop across R = RI
•      VC = voltage drop across C =XCI =
  I/2πfC
•      ΦC = phase angle between I and V
• The voltage VR is in phase with I and VC lags
  I by 900 .The voltage sum is:
•                V = VR + VC
                           The phasor diagram:
The triangle having VR , Vc and V as its side is called voltage triangle for
                          a series R-C circuit.
The phase angle ΦC between the supply voltage and the circuit current
 is the angle between the hypotenuse and the side VR . It is observed :
                              V2 = V 2R + V2c
                                       = (RI)2 + (Xc I)2
                                   V2/I2 = R2 + X2c
                                   V/I = √(R2 + X2c)
                                     Zc = √(R2 + X2c)
           Zc is called the impedance of a series R-C circuit
                                          Zc = V/I
                                           V = Zc I
Impedance Triangle for a Series R-
            C Circuit
If the length of each side of the voltage triangle
is divided by current I , the impedance triangle
    is obtained . The impedance triangle for a
     series R-C circuit is given. The following
    results may be found from an impedance
          triangle for a series R-C circuit:
                          ZC = √(R2 + X2C)
                           R = ZCcosΦC
                          XC = ZC sinΦC
                     tanΦC = XC /R
1.6 Series RLC circuit
 A circuit having R, l and C in series is called a general
  series circuit current is used as reference phasor in
 series circuit since it is common to all the elements of
             circuit. There are four voltages
                    VR in phase with I
                    VL leading I by 900
                    VC lagging I by 900
             Total voltage V = VR + VL + VC
               Phasor diagram:
 VL and VC are in opp. Directions and their
    resultant is their arithmetic differnce
There are 3 possible cases in series RLC circuit
            a. VL > VC i.e; Xl > XC
            b. VL < VC i.e; Xl < XC
            c. VL = VC i.e; Xl = XC
• When XL > XC the circuit is predominantly
  inductive .
• # Inductive circuits cause the current ‘lag’ the
  voltage.
•             V=I √[R2 + ( Xl - XC )2]
•             Z = √[R2 + ( Xl - XC )2]
• When XL < XC the circuit is predominately
  capacitive.
• # Capacitive circuits cause the current to ‘lead’
  the voltage.
•              V=I √[R2 + ( Xc - Xl )2]
•             Z = √[R2 + ( Xc - XL )2]
Impedance Triangle for RLC circuit
If the length of each side of a voltage triangle is
divided by current I, the impedance triangle is
   obtained. The impedence triangle for series
                   RLC circuit :
          2. RESONANCE
• Resonance is a condition in an RLC circuit in
  which the capacitive and inductive reactance are
  equal in magnitude, thereby resulting in a purely
  resistive impedance.
• At resonance, the impedance consists only
  resistive component R.
• The value of current will be maximum since the
  total impedance is minimum.
• The voltage and current are in phase.
• Maximum power occurs at resonance since the
  power factor is unity
• Resonance circuits are useful for constructing
  filters and used in many application.
2.1 Series Resonance Circuit
      2.2 Resonance in series RLC
                circuit
Total impedance of series RLC
Circuit is
  ZTotal  R  jX L - jX C
 ZTotal  R  j(X L - XC )
At resonance
    X L  XC
The impedance now               The current at resonance
reduce to                                       Vs     V
 ZTotal  R                             Im            m
                                               ZTotal   R
2.3 Parallel Resonance
At resonance, currents IL and IC are equal and
cancelling giving a net reactive current equal to
zero. Then at resonance the above equation
becomes.
We remember that the total current flowing in a
parallel RLC circuit is equal to the vector sum of
the individual branch currents and for a given
frequency is calculated as:
     2.4 Resonance Frequency
Resonance frequency is the frequency where the
condition of resonance occur.
Also known as center frequency.
Resonance frequency
                      1
                 ωo     rad/s
                      LC
                           1
                  fo            Hz
                         2 LC
  VARIATION OF DIFFERENT
QUANTITIES WITH FREQUENCY
     2.5 Variation of inductive
     reactance with frequency
 The inductive reactance XL =2∏fL is directly
proportional to the frequency f .Hence its graph
      is a straight line through the origin
    2.6 Variation of capacitive
     reactance with frequency
The capacitive reactance XC =1/2πfC is inversely
proportional to the frequency . Hence its graph is
   a rectangular hyperbola XL versus f and XC
     versus f curves cut at a point where f=f0
2.7 Variation of current with
         frequency
 The current versus frequency is known as resonance
curve or response curve . The current has a maximum
 value at resonance given by I0 = V/R. The value of I
      decreases on either sides of the resonance
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