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Ch09 STD PDF

This chapter introduces analysis of circuits with sinusoidal sources using phasor analysis. It discusses: 1. Sinusoidal sources and the sinusoidal response, which remains sinusoidal at the same frequency as the driving source for linear circuits. The amplitude and phase angle may differ from the source. 2. Phasors, which represent sinusoidal functions in the frequency domain by carrying their amplitude and phase information as a complex number. Phasors allow solving for the steady-state response without solving differential equations. 3. Impedance, which generalizes resistance to AC circuits by representing the ratio of voltage to current as a complex number for R, L, and C elements. Elements may be in-phase or

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views

Ch09 STD PDF

This chapter introduces analysis of circuits with sinusoidal sources using phasor analysis. It discusses: 1. Sinusoidal sources and the sinusoidal response, which remains sinusoidal at the same frequency as the driving source for linear circuits. The amplitude and phase angle may differ from the source. 2. Phasors, which represent sinusoidal functions in the frequency domain by carrying their amplitude and phase information as a complex number. Phasors allow solving for the steady-state response without solving differential equations. 3. Impedance, which generalizes resistance to AC circuits by representing the ratio of voltage to current as a complex number for R, L, and C elements. Elements may be in-phase or

Uploaded by

Khalid W. Nasser
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 58

Chapter 9

Sinusoidal Steady–State
Analysis

9.1-9.2 The Sinusoidal Source and Response


9.3 The Phasor
9.4 Impedances of Passive Elements
9.5-9.9 Circuit Analysis Techniques in the
Frequency Domain
9.10-9.11 The Transformer
9.12 Phasor Diagrams

1
Overview

 We will generalize circuit analysis from


constant to time-varying sources (Ch7-14).
 Sinusoidal sources are particularly important
because: (1) Generation, transmission,
consumption of electric energy occur under
sinusoidal conditions. (2) It can be used to
predict the behaviors of circuits with non-
sinusoidal sources.
 Need to work in the realm of complex numbers.
2
Key points

 What is the phase of a sinusoidal function?


 What is the phasor of a sinusoidal function?
 What is the phase of an impedance? What are
in-phase and quadrature?
 How to solve the sinusoidal steady-state
response by using phasor and impedance?
 What is the reflected impedance of a circuit with
transformer?

3
Section 9.1, 9.2
The Sinusoidal Source and
Response

1. Definitions
2. Characteristics of sinusoidal
response

4
Definition

 A source producing a voltage varying


sinusoidally with time: v(t) = Vm cos(t + ).

Vm: Amplitude.
: Phase angle,
determines the
value at t = 0.

: Angular frequency, related to period T via  = 2/T.


The argument t changes 2 radians (360) in one period.
5
More on phase angle
 Change of phase angle shifts the curve along
the time axis without changing the shape
(amplitude, angular frequency).
 Positive phase (>0),  the curve is shifted
to the left by   in time, and vice versa.

Vm cos(t+)

Vm cos(t)

6
Example: RL circuit (1)

 Consider an RL circuit with zero initial current


i (t  0  )  0 and driven by a sinusoidal voltage
source vs (t )  Vm cos(t   ) :

d
 By KVL: L i  Ri  Vm cos(t   ).
dt
7
Example: RL circuit (2)

 The complete solution to the ODE and initial


condition is (verified by substitution):
i (t )  itr (t )  iss (t ),

Vm cos(   ) ( R L ) t Transient response,


itr (t )   e vanishes as t  .
R  L
2 2 2

Vm
iss (t )  cos(t     ) Steady-state response,
R 2   2 L2 lasts even t  .

  tan 1 L R .

8
Characteristics of steady-state response

 iss(t) of this example exhibits the following


characteristics of steady-state response:
Vm
iss (t )  cos(t     )
R  L
2 2 2

1. It remains sinusoidal of the same frequency as


the driving source if the circuit is linear (with
constant R, L, C values).
2. The amplitude differs from that of the source.
3. The phase angle differs from that of the source.
9
Purpose of Chapter 9

 Directly finding the steady-state response


without solving the differential equation.
 According to the characteristics of steady-state
response, the task is reduced to finding two real
numbers, i.e. amplitude and phase angle, of the
response. The waveform and frequency of the
response are already known.
 Transient response matters in switching. It will
be dealt with in Chapters 7, 8, 12, 13.

10
Section 9.3
The Phasor

1. Definitions
2. Solve steady-state response by
phasor

11
Definition

 The phasor is a constant complex number


that carries the amplitude and phase angle
information of a sinusoidal function.
 The concept of phasor is rooted in Euler’s
identity, which relates the (complex)
exponential function to the trigonometric
functions: e  j  cos   j sin  .

   
 cos   Re e j , sin   Im e j .

12
Phasor representation

 A sinusoidal function can be represented by the


real part of a phasor times the “complex carrier”.
 
Vm cos(t   )  Vm Re e j (t  )

 Re Vm e j
e  Re V  e 
j t j t

phasor carrier
 A phasor can be represented in two forms:
1. Polar form (good for , ):
j Vm
V  Vm e  Vm ,
Imag.
2. Rectangular form (good for +, -): 
V  Vm cos   jVm sin  . real
13
Phasor transformation

 A phasor can be regarded as the “phasor


transform” of a sinusoidal function from the time
domain to the frequency domain:
  j
V  P Vm cos(t   )  Vm e .
time domain freq. domain

 The “inverse phasor transform” of a phasor is a


sinusoidal function in the time domain:

P -1V  Re Ve jt  Vm cos(t   ).

14
Time derivative  Multiplication of constant
d
Vm cos(t   )  Vm sin(t   )
Time dt
domain:  Vm cos(t    90 ),
d2
V
2 m
cos( t   )   2
Vm cos(t   ).
dt

d  j (  90 )
P  Vm cos(t   )   Vm e
Frequency  dt 
domain:   Vm e j
e j 90
 jV,
 d2 
P  2 Vm cos(t   )   ( j ) 2 V   2 V.
 dt 
15
How to calculate steady-state solution by phasor?

 Step 1: Assume that the solution is of the form:


Re Ae j
e 
j t

 Step 2: Substitute the proposed solution into the


differential equation. The common time-varying
factor e jt of all terms will cancel out, resulting in
two algebraic equations to solve for the two
unknown constants {A, }.

16
Example: RL circuit (1)

 Q: Given vs (t )  Vm cos(t   ), calculate iss(t).

Assume
iss (t )  I m cos(t   ).
d
 L iss (t )  Riss (t )
dt
 Vm cos(t   ),

 L I m cos(t   )  RI m cos(t   )  Vm cos(t   ),


d
dt
 LI m sin(t   )  RI m cos(t   )  Vm cos(t   ),
17
Example: RL circuit (2)

 By cosine convention:
 LI m cos(t    90 )  RI m cos(t   )  Vm cos(t   ),

 Re LI m e j (   90 )
    
e jt  Re RI m e j e jt  Re Vm e j e jt ,
    
 Re jLIe jt  Re RIe jt  Re Ve jt ,
 Re jL  R Ie   ReVe  .
j t j t

 A necessary condition is:


 j L  R  I e j t
 Ve j t
,   jL  R  I  V.

18
Example: RL circuit (3)

 A more convenient way is directly transforming


the ODE from time to frequency domain:
d
L iss (t )  Riss (t )  Vm cos(t   ),
dt
 L j I  RI  V ,  jL  R I  V.

 The solution can be obtained by one complex (i.e.


two real) algebraic equation:
j
V j V e
I , i.e. I m e  m .
jL  R jL  R
19
Section 9.4
Impedances of The Passive
Circuit Elements

1. Generalize resistance to impedance


2. Impedances of R, L, C
3. In phase & quadrature

20
What is the impedance?

 For a resistor, the ratio of voltage v(t) to the


current i(t) is a real constant R (Ohm’s law):
v (t )
R . …resistance
i (t )

 For two terminals of a linear circuit driven by


sinusoidal sources, the ratio of voltage phasor V
to the current phasor I is a complex constant Z:
V
Z  . …impedance
I
21
The i-v relation and impedance of a resistor

 i(t) and v(t) reach the peaks simultaneously (in


phase),  impedance Z = R is real.

22
The i-v relation and impedance of an inductor (1)

 Assume i (t )  I m cos(t  i )
d
 v (t )  L i (t )
dt
 L I m sin(t  i )
 LI m cos(t  i  90 ).
 By phasor transformation:
V  L  jI
V
 Z   jL.
I
23
The i-v relation and impedance of an inductor (2)

 v(t) leads i(t) by T/4 (+90 phase, i.e. quadrature)


 impedance Z = jL is purely positive imaginary.
d
v(t )  L i (t )
dt

24
The i-v relation and impedance of an capacitor (1)

d V 1
i (t )  C v(t ). I  C  j V ,  Z   .
dt I jC

25
The i-v relation and impedance of a capacitor (2)

 v(t) lags i(t) by T/4 (-90 phase, i.e. quadrature)


 impedance Z  1  jC  is purely negative
imaginary.

26
More on impedance

 Impedance Z is a complex number in units of


Ohms.
 Impedance of a “mutual” inductance M is jM.
 ReZ   R, ImZ   X are called resistance and
reactance, respectively.
 Although impedance is complex, it’s not a
phasor. In other words, it cannot be transformed
into a sinusoidal function in the time domain.

27
Section 9.5-9.9
Circuit Analysis Techniques
in the Frequency Domain

28
Summary

 All the DC circuit analysis techniques:


1. KVL, KCL;
2. Series, parallel, -Y simplifications;
3. Source transformations;
4. Thévenin, Norton equivalent circuits;
5. NVM, MCM;
are still applicable to sinusoidal steady-state
analysis if the voltages, currents, and passive
elements are replaced by the corresponding
phasors and impedances. 29
KVL, KCL
n
 KVL: v1 (t )  v2 (t )    vn (t )   vq (t )  0,
q 1

 
n n
 Vmq cos(t   q )   Re Vmq e
j ( t  q )

q 1 q 1

n

  Re Vmq e q
j
 jt
e  0,
 q 1 
V1  V2  ...  Vn  0.
 KCL: i1(t) + i2(t) +… + in(t) = 0, 
I1  I 2  ...  I n  0.
30
Equivalent impedance formulas

 Impedances in series

Z ab   Z j
j

 Impedances in parallel

1 1

Z ab j Z j

31
Example 9.6: Series RLC circuit (1)

 Q: Given vs(t)=750 cos(5000t+30),  i(t)=?

Z L  jL  j (5000)(32 10 3 )  j160 ,



 1 1
Z C  j   j 40 ,
 j C 6
(5000)(5 10 )
V  75030 V,
 s
32
Example 9.6: Series RLC circuit (2)

Z ab  90  j160  j 40  90  j120
 90 2  120 2  tan 1 (120 90)  15053.13 ,
Vs 75030 V
I   5  23 . 13
A,
Z ab 15053.13 

 i (t )  5 cos(5000t  23.13 ) A.
33
Thévenin equivalent circuit

 Terminal voltage phasor and current phasor are


the same by using either configuration.

34
Example 9.10 (1)

 Q: Find the Thévenin circuit for terminals a, b.

 Apply source transformation to {120V, 12, 60}


twice to get a simplified circuit.
35
Example 9.10 (2)

100  (10  j 40  120)I  10Vx ,  (130  j 40)I  10Vx  100 (1)


Vx  100  10I  ( 2)
36
Example 9.10 (3)

 900
I  18  126.87 A,
30  j 40
VTh  10(100  10I)  120I  835.22  20.17 V.
37
Example 9.10 (4)
VT
Ia 
 j 40  (12 // 60)
VT
 ,
10  j 40
Vx  (12 // 60)I a  10I a ,
VT  10Vx
Ib  ,
120

VT  100I a I a VT 1 VT VT
IT  I a  I b  I a      ,
120 6 120 6 10  j 40 120
Z Th  VT IT  91.2  j 38.4 .
38
Section 9.10, 9.11
The Transformer

1. Linear transformer, reflected


impedance
2. Ideal transformer

39
Summary

 A device based on magnetic coupling.


 Linear transformer is used in communication
circuits to (1) match impedances, and (2)
eliminate dc signals.
 Ideal transformer is used in power circuits to
establish ac voltage levels.
 MCM is used in transformer analysis, for the
currents in various coils cannot be written by
inspection as functions of the node voltages.

40
Analysis of linear transformer (1)

 Consider two coils wound around a single core


(magnetic coupling):

 +
+ 

Z11
Mesh current  Vs  ( Z s  R1  jL1 )I1  jMI 2 ,

equations: 0   jMI1  ( R2  jL2  Z L )I 2 .
Z22 41
Analysis of linear transformer (2)

Z 22 jM jM
 I1  Vs , I 2  I1  Vs .
Z11Z 22   M
2 2
Z 22 Z11Z 22   M
2 2

Zint Z11 Z22

Vs Z11Z 22   2 M 2 2M 2
 Z int    Z11  .
I1 Z 22 Z 22
42
Input impedance of the primary coil

Zint

Zab

2M 2 2M 2
Z ab  Z int  Z s  R1  jL1   Z r , Z r   .
Z 22 R2  jL2  Z L
 Zr is the equivalent impedance of the secondary
coil and load due to the mutual inductance.
 Zab = ZS is needed to prevent power reflection.
43
Reflected impedance
2
 M
2 2
 M
2 2
 M  *
Zr   *
Z    Z 22 .
Z 22 *
Z 22 Z 22
22 Z 
 22 

Z22

 Linear transformer reflects (Z22)* into the


primary coil by a scalar multiplier (M/|Z22|)2.
44
Example 9.13 (1)
 Q: Find the Thévenin circuit for terminals c, d.
I2
c

VTh = Vcd. Since I2 = 0,  Vcd = I1jM, where


Vs 3000
I1    79.67  79.29 A.
Z11 (500  j100)  ( 200  j 3600)

 VTh  (79.67  79.29 )  ( j1200)  95.610.71 V.


45
Example 9.13 (2)

c
Short ZTh
Z11
d

 ZTh = (100+j1600) + Zr, where Zr is the reflected


impedance of Z11 due to the transformer:
Z11  (500  j100)  ( 200  j 3600)  700  j 3700  .
2 2
 M  *  1200 
Z r    Z11  

 (700  j 3700),
 700  j 3700 
 Z 11   
Z Th  (100  j1600)  Z r  171.09  j1224.26  .
46
Characteristics of ideal transformer

 An ideal transformer consists of two


magnetically coupled coils with N1 and N2 turns,
respectively. It exhibits three properties:
1. Magnetic field is perfectly confined within the
magnetic core,  magnetic coupling coefficient
is k = 1,  M  L1 L2 .
2. The self-inductance of each coil Li  N i2  is
large, i.e. L1 = L2  .
3. The coil loss is negligible: R1 = R2  .
47
Current ratio
L1L2

 By solving the two mesh equations of a general


linear transformer: if L2 >> |ZL|
I1 Z 22 jL2  Z L L2 N 2
     .
I 2 jM j L1L2 L1 N1
48
Voltage ratio
L1L2

+ +
V1 V2
 

jM  V1  jL1I1  jMI 2 ,


 Substitute I 2  I1 into 
Z 22  V2  Z L I 2 .
jL2 + ZL
V1 Z 22  jL1    2 M 2 L1 L1 N1
     .
V2 jMZ L M L2 N 2
49
Input impedance
L1L2

+ +
V1 V2
Zin
 

 By the current and voltage ratios, in-phase


2 2
Z ab V1 I1 V1 I 2  N1   N1 
     ,  Z in  Z ab    Z L .
Z L V2 I 2 V2 I1  N 2   N2 
2
 N1 
 For lossy transformer,  Z ab  R1    R2  Z L .
 N2  50
Polarity of the voltage and current ratios

51
Example 9.14 (1)
 Q: Find v1, i1, v2, i2.
Zs
ZL

2500
cos(400t)

52
Example 9.14 (2)

25000  (0.25  j 2)I1  V1  (1)


V2  (0.2375  j 0.05)I 2 ,
   V1  (23.75  j 5)I1  (2)
V1  10V2 , I 2  10I1 , 
25000
( 2)  (1) : I1   100  16.26 , i1  100 cos( 400t  16.26 ).
24  j 7
By (2) : V1  ( 23.75  j5)(100  16.26 )  2427  4.37 , v1  
53
Section 9.12
Phasor Diagrams

54
Definition

 Graphical representation of -7-j3 = 7.62-156.8


on the complex-number plane.

 Without calculation, we can anticipate a


magnitude >7, and a phase in the 3rd quadrant.
55
Example 9.15 (1)

 Q: Use a phasor diagram to find the value of R


that will cause iR to lag the source current is by
45° when  = 5 krad/s.

j1 -j0.25

Vm Vm Vm
IL   Vm  90 , IC 

 4Vm90 , I R 

 Vm0.
j1  j 0.25 R
56
Example 9.15 (2)

 By KCL, Is = IL + IC + IR. Addition of the 3 current


phasors can be visualized by vector summation
on a phase diagram:

To make Is = 45,


j3Vm IR = 3Vm,
 R = 1/3 .

57
Key points

 What is the phase of a sinusoidal function?


 What is the phasor of a sinusoidal function?
 What is the phase of an impedance? What are
in-phase and quadrature?
 How to solve the sinusoidal steady-state
response by using phasor and impedance?
 What is the reflected impedance of a circuit with
transformer?

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