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Lecture 26

Lecture 26. Review Steady state sinusoidal response Phasor representation of sinusoids Phasor diagrams Phasor representation of circuit elements Related educational modules: Section 2.7.2, 2.7.3. Steady state sinusoidal response – overview.

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Lecture 26

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  1. Lecture 26 Review Steady state sinusoidal response Phasor representation of sinusoids Phasor diagrams Phasor representation of circuit elements Related educational modules: Section 2.7.2, 2.7.3

  2. Steady state sinusoidal response – overview • Sinusoidal input; we want the steady state response • Apply a conceptual input consisting of a complex exponential input with the same frequency, amplitude and phase • The actual input is the real part of the conceptual input • Determine the response to the conceptual input • The governing equations will become algebraic • The actual response is the real part of this response

  3. Review lecture 25 example • Determine i(t), t, if Vs(t) = Vmcos(100t). • Let Vs(t) be: • Phasor: • The phasor current is: • So that

  4. Phasor Diagrams • Relationships between phasors are sometimes presented graphically • Called phasor diagrams • The phasors are represented by vectors in the complex plane • A “snapshot” of the relative phasor positions • For our example: • ,

  5. Phasor Diagrams – notes • Phasor lengths on diagram generally not to scale • They may not even share the same units • Phasor lengths are generally labeled on the diagram • The phase difference between the phasors is labeled on the diagram

  6. Phasors and time domain signals • The time-domain (sinusoidal) signals are completely described by the phasors • Our example from Lecture 25:

  7. Example 1 – Circuit analysis using phasors • Use phasors to determine the steady state current i(t) in the circuit below if Vs(t) = 12cos(120t). Sketch a phasor diagram showing the source voltage and resulting current.

  8. Example 1: governing equation

  9. Example 1: Apply phasor signals to equation • Governing equation: • Input: • Output:

  10. Example 1: Phasor diagram • Input voltage phasor: • Output current phasor:

  11. Circuit element voltage-current relations • We have used phasor representations of signals in the circuit’s governing differential equation to obtain algebraic equations in the frequency domain • This process can be simplified: • Write phasor-domain voltage-current relations for circuit elements • Convert the overall circuit to the frequency domain • Write the governing algebraic equations directly in the frequency domain

  12. Resistor i-v relations • Time domain: • Voltage-current relation: • Conversion to phasor: • Voltage-current relation:

  13. Resistor phasor voltage-current relations • Phasor voltage-current relation for resistors: • Phasor diagram: • Note: voltage and current have same phase for resistor

  14. Resistor voltage-current waveforms • Notes: Resistor current and voltage are in phase; lack of energy storage implies no phase shift

  15. Inductor i-v relations • Time domain: • Voltage-current relation: • Conversion to phasor: • Voltage-current relation:

  16. Inductor phasor voltage-current relations • Phasor voltage-current relation for inductors: • Phasor diagram: • Note: current lags voltage by 90 for inductors

  17. Inductor voltage-current waveforms • Notes: Current and voltage are 90 out of phase; derivative associated with energy storage causes current to lag voltage

  18. Capacitor i-v relations • Time domain: • Voltage-current relation: • Conversion to phasor: • Voltage-current relation:

  19. Capacitor phasor voltage-current relations • Phasor voltage-current relation for capacitors: • Phasor diagram: • Note: voltage lags current by 90 for capacitors

  20. Capacitor voltage-current waveforms • Notes: Current and voltage are 90 out of phase; derivative associated with energy storage causes voltage to lag current

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