Power in AC Circuits: EEE 3 Lecture 8
Power in AC Circuits: EEE 3 Lecture 8
EEE 3 Lecture 8
Objectives
• Define, differentiate, and calculate the
• real,
• reactive, and
• apparent powers
consumed or generated by circuit elements.
Outline
• Power in DC vs Power in AC
• Complex Power
• Instantaneous Power
• Real, Reactive, and Apparent Power
• Power factor
• Power Triangle
DC vs. AC: Power supplied by source
• Symbol:
• Units: Magnitude is in Volt-Amperes (VA)
• Real part is called Active Power (in Watts)
• Imaginary part is called Reactive Power (in VARs)
Complex Power
• Symbol: VA or S
• Units: Volt-Amperes (VA)
Real Power or Active Power
➢ Definition: The time average of the instantaneous power.
The power converted to useful work or heat.
P = VI cos(θ𝑉 − θ𝐼 )
• Symbol: P
• Units: Watts
• Real power = power consumed by a resistance
• Symbol: Q
• Units: Volt-Ampere Reactive (VARs)
Special Cases
Circuit Element
+ _
Consumed
Circuit Element
Real Reactive Apparent
Resistor VI 0 VI
Inductor 0 VI VI
Capacitor 0 -VI VI
Power Factor
• Definition: The ratio of the real power and apparent power.
S =VSIS* = (5/0O)(1/–30O)*
= 5/+30O VA
= 4.3 Watts + j2.5 VARs
• Power factor is “lag”
Currents and Complex Power
Given a voltage at the reference angle, VS=5/0O Volts
S = VSIS* = (5/0O)(1/+30O)*
= 5/–30O VA
= 4.3 Watts – j2.5 VARs
• Power factor is “lead”
The Power Triangle
Right triangle used for frequency-domain power calculations.
Im
VA
Q
S
Re
P
Announcements
• Practice set to be released this weekend
• Submit with the problem set
• Exam 3 (problem set)
• Tentative release: week of April 29 (UVLE)
• Submission: next meeting right after the exam, 8:30AM (submit upon
entering the room)
• Compre exam/finals
• Sometime in the finals week
• For those who have missed an exam OR who wants to replace their
lowest exam (please notify me if you are taking the exam)
• Will cover all topics
5 0.5H
Homework: Given
vs=100cos10t volts + iX
is=10cos(10t+30 ) v
o
.01F is
s 10
amps. Find iX using -
the Thevenin
equivalent circuit
as seen by the 10Ω
resistor.
Example 1:
• A certain appliance with the equivalent circuit as shown is
supplied from a 220-V AC source through a wire with a 0.5-
Ohm resistance and 3.06-mH inductance.
• Find the real and reactive power consumed by the appliance.
• Find the daily energy consumed in kWh if the appliance run for
8-hours a day.
0.5 3.06 mH
Appliance
+ iS(t) 7.5
vS(t)
- 12.854 mH
Without power
saving device:
With power
saving device:
Power Factor Correction
A single-phase source delivers 100kW to a load operating at a
power factor of 0.8 lagging. Calculate the reactive power to be
delivered by a capacitor connected in parallel with the load in
order to raise the power factor to 0.95 lagging.
Power Factor Correction
Basically, the power saving device is a power factor corrector.
✓ Reduces the apparent power
✓ Reduces the source current magnitude (I=S/V)
VA
Re