AC Series-Parallel Circuits Chapter 18. AC Circuits 2 Rules and laws developed for dc circuits apply...

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AC Series-Parallel Circuits

Chapter 18

AC Circuits

2

Rules and laws developed for dc circuits apply equally well for ac circuits

Analysis of ac circuits requires vector algebra and use of complex numbers

Voltages and currents in phasor formExpressed as RMS (or effective) values

Ohm’s Law

3

Voltage and current of a resistor will be in phase

Impedance of a resistor is: ZR = R0°

IR

VI

0

4

5

6

7

8

Ohm’s Law

9

Voltage across an inductor leads the current by 90°(ELI the ICE man)

90

90

90

I

X

V

X

L

LL

I

I

Z

10

11

Ohm’s Law

12

Current through a capacitor leads the voltage by 90° (ELI the ICE man)

90

90

90

I

X

V

X

C

CC

I

I

Z

13

14

AC Series Circuits

15

Current everywhere in a series circuit is the same

Impedance used to collectively determine how resistance, capacitance, and inductance impede current in a circuit

AC Series Circuits

16

Total impedance in a circuit is found by adding all individual impedances vectorially

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Impedance Diagram

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Polar/Rectangular Form

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AC Series Circuits

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Impedance vectors will appear in either the first or the fourth quadrants because the resistance vector is always positive

When impedance vector appears in first quadrant, the circuit is inductive

AC Series Circuits

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If impedance vector appears in fourth quadrantCircuit is capacitive

Example

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Power Dissipation

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Example

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KVL and Voltage Divider Rule

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Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law

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KVL is same as in dc circuitsPhasor sum of voltage drops and rises around

a closed loop is equal to zero

Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law

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VoltagesMay be added in phasor form or in rectangular

formIf using rectangular form

Add real parts togetherThen add imaginary parts together

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Example

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AC Parallel Circuits

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Conductance, GReciprocal of the resistance

Susceptance, BReciprocal of the reactance

AC Parallel Circuits

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Admittance, YReciprocal of the impedance

Units for all of these are siemens (S)

AC Parallel Circuits

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Example

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AC Parallel Circuits

40

Impedances in parallel add together like resistors in parallel

These impedances must be added vectorially

AC Parallel Circuits

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Example

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Example

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Example

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Parallel Circuits

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AC Parallel Circuits

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Whenever a capacitor and an inductor having equal reactances are placed in parallelEquivalent circuit of the two components is an

open circuit

Example

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Kirchhoff’s Current Law

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KCL is same as in dc circuitsSummation of current phasors entering and

leaving a nodeEqual to zero

Kirchhoff’s Current Law

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Currents must be added vectoriallyCurrents entering are positiveCurrents leaving are negative

KCL

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Current Divider Rule

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In a parallel circuitVoltages across all branches are equal

TT

TT

T

IZ

ZI

ZIZI

VV

xx

xx

x

Example

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Example

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Solution

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Series-Parallel Circuits

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Label all impedances with magnitude and the associated angle

Analysis is simplified by starting with easily recognized combinations

Series-Parallel Circuits

56

Redraw circuit if necessary for further simplification

Fundamental rules and laws of circuit analysis must apply in all cases

Series-Parallel

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Example

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Frequency Effects of RC Circuits

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Impedance of a capacitor decreases as the frequency increases

For dc (f = 0 Hz)Impedance of the capacitor is infinite

Frequency Effects of RC Circuits

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For a series RC circuitTotal impedance approaches R as the

frequency increasesFor a parallel RC circuit

As frequency increases, impedance goes from R to a smaller value

Frequency Effects of RL Circuits

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Impedance of an inductor increases as frequency increases

At dc (f = 0 Hz)Inductor looks like a shortAt high frequencies, it looks like an open

Frequency Effects of RL Circuits

63

In a series RL circuitImpedance increases from R to a larger value

In a parallel RL circuitImpedance increases from a small value to R

Corner Frequency

64

Corner frequency is a break point on the frequency response graph

For a capacitive circuitC = 1/RC = 1/

For an inductive circuitC = R/L = 1/

RLC Circuits

65

In a circuit with R, L, and C components combined in series-parallel combinationsImpedance may rise or fall across a range of

frequenciesIn a series branch

Impedance of inductor may equal the capacitor

RLC Circuits

66

Impedances would cancelLeaving impedance of resistor as the only

impedanceCondition is referred to as resonance

Applications

67

AC circuits may be simplified as a series circuit having resistance and a reactance

AC circuitMay be represented as an equivalent parallel

circuit with a single resistor and a single reactance

Applications

68

Any equivalent circuit will be valid only at the given frequency of operation