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Lecture 31 •Sinsuoidal steady state power •Instantaneous and average (real) power •Reactive power •Complex power •Power factor •Related educational materials: –Chapter 12.1 - 12.5

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Page 1: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Lecture 31•Sinsuoidal steady state power

• Instantaneous and average (real) power• Reactive power• Complex power• Power factor

•Related educational materials: – Chapter 12.1 - 12.5

Page 2: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

AC power

• Power is still the product of voltage and current:

• We are now interested in the case in which the voltage and current are sinusoids:

Page 3: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

v(t) and i(t) are related

ZIV ZIV ZIV

Page 4: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Instantaneous AC power

• Our previous (time domain) definition of power is called the instantaneous power

• In terms of our sinusoidal voltage & current:

• After some trigonometry and algebra:

– The power consists of a DC (constant) part and an AC (sinusoidal part)

Page 5: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Graphical representation of p(t)

Page 6: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Alternate representation for p(t)

• Which can be decomposed into two plots:

– Average (real) power and reactive power

Page 7: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Average Power• We are generally more interested in the average

power delivered to a load:

• Average power is:

– This is also called the real power (it’s the power that’s provided to the resistive part of the load over time)

– Units are watts

Page 8: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

RMS values• We want to assess the power delivered by different

types of time-varying signals– The power delivered to a resistive load:

• Find a DC (constant) value which delivers the same average power as the time-varying signal– Called the effective or RMS value of the signal– Used to “compare” different time-varying signals

Page 9: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

• Note: we want our average power to look like an “average” current squared times resistance or an “average” voltage squared divided by resistance– We want to define these “effective” values

• Note why it’s called “RMS”

Page 10: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

RMS values – continued• Average power:

• Effective DC value:

• Equating to time-average value:

• ,

Page 11: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

• Annotate previous slide to show VRMS, IRMS notation (RMS = “effective”)

Page 12: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Definition of RMS values• The effective (or RMS) value of a signal is equal to

the DC value which provides the same average power to a resistor

• For sinusoidal signal with no DC offset: ,

• Average power in terms of RMS values:

Page 13: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Apparent power and power factor

• Power in terms of RMS values:

• The average (real) power is the product of apparent power and the power factor– Apparent power: (units = volt-amps = VA)

– Power factor (pf): (unitless)• Power factor is leading or lagging, to denote whether current

leads or lags voltage

Page 14: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Interpretation of apparent power and pf

• Power factor is a property of the load– For a complex load, the

power delivered to the load is not exactly the power supplied by the generator

– If ZL is real pf = 1

– If ZL is imaginary pf = 0, and no average power is delivered to the load

Page 15: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

• On previous slide, mention reactive power again.

Page 16: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Complex Power

• Complex power is a way to conveniently expressing the various power parameters and their relationships

or:

iveffeff IVS

Page 17: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

• Annotate previous slide to show real (average) power and reactive power

Page 18: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Power relationships

• Complex power:

– Magnitude of S is the apparent power (units = VA)– The real part of S is the average power (units = watts)

– The imaginary part of S is the reactive power (units = VAR)

Page 19: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Power Triangle

Page 20: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

Example• For the circuit below,

(a) find the average power delivered by the source(b) find the powers absorbed by the resistor and capacitor(c) find the apparent and reactive powers delivered by the source(d) sketch a power triangle for the source

Page 21: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

(a) find the average power delivered by the source

Page 22: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

(b) find the powers absorbed by the resistor and capacitor

Page 23: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

(c) find the apparent and reactive powers delivered by the source

0100SV

663887 ..I S

Page 24: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials:

(d) sketch a power triangle for the source

• Apparent power: 391VA• Average power: 305W• Reactive power: -244VAR

Page 25: Lecture 31 Sinsuoidal steady state power Instantaneous and average (real) power Reactive power Complex power Power factor Related educational materials: