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Lecture Outlines

Chapter 24

Physics, 3rd Edition


James S. Walker

2007 Pearson Prentice Hall


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Chapter 24
Alternating-Current Circuits
Units of Chapter 24
Alternating Voltages and Currents
Capacitors in AC Circuits
RC Circuits
Inductors in AC Circuits
RLC Circuits
Resonance in Electrical Circuits
24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents
Wall sockets provide current and voltage that
vary sinusoidally with time.
Here is a simple ac circuit:
24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents
The voltage as a function of time is:
24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents
Since this circuit has only a resistor, the
current is given by:

Here, the current and


voltage have peaks
at the same time
they are in phase.
24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents
In order to visualize the phase relationships
between the current and voltage in ac circuits,
we define phasors vectors whose length is the
maximum voltage or current, and which rotate
around an origin with the angular speed of the
oscillating current.
The instantaneous
value of the voltage or
current represented
by the phasor is its
projection on the y
axis.
24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents
The voltage and current in an ac circuit both
average to zero, making the average useless in
describing their behavior.
We use instead the root mean square (rms); we
square the value, find the mean value, and then
take the square root:

120 volts is the rms value of household ac.


24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents

By calculating the power and finding the


average, we see that:
24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents
Electrical fires can be started by improper or
damaged wiring because of the heat caused by a
too-large current or resistance.
A fuse is designed to be the hottest point in the
circuit if the current is too high, the fuse melts.
A circuit breaker is similar, except that it is a
bimetallic strip that bends enough to break the
connection when it becomes too hot. When it
cools, it can be reset.
24-1 Alternating Voltages and Currents

A ground fault circuit interrupter can cut off the


current in a short circuit within a millisecond.
24-2 Capacitors in AC Circuits

How is the rms current in the capacitor


related to its capacitance and to the
frequency? The answer, which requires
calculus to derive:
24-2 Capacitors in AC Circuits
In analogy with resistance, we write:
24-2 Capacitors in AC Circuits
The voltage and
current in a capacitor
are not in phase. The
voltage lags by 90.
24-3 RC Circuits

In an RC circuit, the current across the resistor


and the current across the capacitor are not in
phase. This means that the maximum current is
not the sum of the maximum resistor current
and the maximum capacitor current; they do
not peak at the same time.
24-3 RC Circuits
This phasor diagram
illustrates the phase
relationships. The
voltages across the
capacitor and across the
resistor are at 90 in the
diagram; if they are
added as vectors, we
find the maximum.
24-3 RC Circuits

This has the exact same form as V = IR if we


define the impedance, Z:
24-3 RC Circuits

There is a phase angle


between the voltage and
the current, as seen in the
diagram.
24-3 RC Circuits

The power in the circuit is given by:

Because of this, the factor cos is called


the power factor.
24-4 Inductors in AC Circuits

Just as with capacitance, we can define


inductive reactance:
24-4 Inductors in AC Circuits
The voltage across an inductor leads the
current by 90.
24-4 Inductors in AC Circuits
The power factor for an RL circuit is:

Currents in resistors,
capacitors, and
inductors as a
function of
frequency:
24-5 RLC Circuits
A phasor diagram is a useful way to analyze an
RLC circuit.
24-5 RLC Circuits

The phase angle for an RLC circuit is:

If XL = XC, the phase angle is zero, and the


voltage and current are in phase.

The power factor:


24-5 RLC Circuits
At high frequencies, the capacitive reactance is
very small, while the inductive reactance is very
large. The opposite is true at low frequencies.
24-6 Resonance in Electrical Circuits
If a charged capacitor is connected across an
inductor, the system will oscillate indefinitely in
the absence of resistance.
24-6 Resonance in Electrical Circuits

The rms voltages across the capacitor and


inductor must be the same; therefore, we can
calculate the resonant frequency.
24-6 Resonance in Electrical Circuits
In an RLC circuit with an ac power source, the
impedance is a minimum at the resonant
frequency:
24-6 Resonance in Electrical Circuits
The smaller the resistance, the larger the
resonant current:
Summary of Chapter 24
The voltage from an ac generator varies
sinusoidally:

Phasor represents voltage or current in ac


circuit; as it rotates, its y component gives the
instantaneous value.
Root mean square (rms) of a sinusoidally
varying quantity:
Summary of Chapter 24

rms current in a capacitor:

Capacitive reactance:
Voltage across capacitor lags current by 90
Impedance in an RC circuit:

Average power:
Summary of Chapter 24
Inductive reactance:
Impedance of an RL circuit:

Impedance of an RLC circuit:

Resonant frequency of an LC circuit:

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