AS Physics Unit 1 6 Alternating Currents AS Physics Unit 1 6 Alternating Currents Mr D Powell.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Alternating Current voltage time 0 maximum positive voltage (the peak voltage) maximum negative voltage (peak voltage) Direction of current and size constantly.
Advertisements

Alternating Current Circuits
Using an Oscilloscope Electricity Lesson 12. Homework Revise for the exam! Make revision check lists (lists of definitions, equations, derivations), make.
Fisica Generale - Alan Giambattista, Betty McCarty Richardson Copyright © 2008 – The McGraw-Hill Companies s.r.l. 1 Chapter 21: Alternating Currents Sinusoidal.
Cathode Ray Tubes and their Uses.
POTENTIAL GRADIENT & CATHODE RAY TUBE
Thermionic emission If a tungsten filament is heated to about 2000 o C, some of the electrons have sufficient kinetic energy to escape from the surface.
Current That Is Changing All the Time.  A direct current travels in one direction only.  In alternating currents the direction of charge flow is changing.
Sinusoidal Waves. Objective of Lecture Discuss the characteristics of a sinusoidal wave. Define the mathematical relationship between the period, frequency,
Measurement of Voltages and Currents
Lesson 17 Intro to AC & Sinusoidal Waveforms
Chapter 15 AC Fundamentals.
1.3c Current Electricity Alternating Currents Breithaupt pages 74 to 79 November 14 th, 2010.
Mains Supply Noadswood Science, 2012.
12: Electromagnetic Induction 12.2 Alternating Current.
PRINCIPLES OF MEASUREMENT AND INSTRUMENTATION EKT 112
We have been using voltage sources that send out a current in a single direction called direct current (dc). Current does not have to flow continuously.
Alternating Current Circuits
Alternating Current Circuits
chapter 33 Alternating Current Circuits
The Effective Value of an Alternating Current (or Voltage) © David Hoult 2009.
Chapter 22 Alternating-Current Circuits and Machines.
AC Circuits (Chapt 33) circuits in which the currents vary in time
AC Waveform and AC Circuit Theory Md Shahabul Alam Dept: EEE.
AC Fundamentals Chapter 15. Introduction 2 Alternating Current 3 Voltages of ac sources alternate in polarity and vary in magnitude Voltages produce.
6.1 Alternating current.
Electrical principles. The aim of today is to understand the average and RMS values in an AC circuit. Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced.
Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.
Electrons Thermionic Emission
Alternating Current Circuits
ELECTRICAL CIRCUIT ET 201 Define and explain characteristics of sinusoidal wave, phase relationships and phase shifting.
2.2 Alternating Current and Voltage
Alternating Current Electricity Lesson 11. Learning Objectives To know what is meant by alternating current. To know how to calculate the rms value of.
Electromagnetism Topic 12.2 Alternating Current. Rotating Coils Most of our electricity comes from huge generators in power stations. Most of our electricity.
Section 2 AC Circuits. Chapter 12 Alternating Current.
1 AC Electricity. Time variation of a DC voltage or current 2 I V Current Voltage time t.
Oscilloscope Muhajir Ab. Rahim School of Mechatronic Engineering
110/16/2015 Applied Physics Lecture 19  Electricity and Magnetism Induced voltages and induction Energy AC circuits and EM waves Resistors in an AC circuits.
The Last Leg The Ups and Downs of Circuits Chapter 31.
Lecture 17 AC circuits RLC circuits Transformer Maxwell.
AC Electricity Muhajir Ab. Rahim School of Mechatronic Engineering
Chapter 15 AC Fundamentals.
 Voltage can be produced such that, over time, it follows the shape of a sine wave  The magnitude of the voltage continually changes.  Polarity may.
Chapter 24 Time-Varying Currents and Fields. AC Circuit An AC circuit consists of a combination of circuit elements and an AC generator or source An AC.
Name: ________________ Class: _________________ Index: ________________ D.C. Circuit.
Introduction to Graphical Hardware Display Technologies
Vadodara Institute of Engineering kotanbi Active learning Assignment on Single phase AC CIRCUIT SUBMITTED BY: 1) Bhatiya gaurang.(13ELEE558) 2)
ELECTRICAL TECHNOLOGY EET 103/4
COVERAGE TOPICS 1. AC Fundamentals AC sinusoids AC response (reactance, impedance) Phasors and complex numbers 2. AC Analysis RL, RC, RLC circuit analysis.
Chapter 8 Alternating Current Circuits. AC Circuit An AC circuit consists of a combination of circuit elements and an AC generator or source An AC circuit.
4.5 ELECTRON BEAMS ELECTRONS AND ELECTRONICS. Electron Beams Given enough energy, electrons can escape from a conductor and move through a vacuum space.Beams.
1 AGBell – EECT by Andrew G. Bell (260) Lecture 11.
Electrons Thermionic Emission
AC Current An AC circuit consists of a combination of circuit elements and an AC generator or source The output of an AC generator is sinusoidal and varies.
As Unit 1 - Electricity What you need to know..  Current is the rate of flow of charged particles.  In metals these are conduction electrons, most electrons.
P.1 Book 4 Section 6.1 Alternating current Patterns formed by light emitting diodes A.c. and d.c. Check-point 1 Effective value of an a.c. Root-mean-square.
Dr. Michael Nasief.  Rotating electrical machines (ac generators)  Electronic oscillator circuits.
ELECTRONIC DEVICES AND CIRCUITS
CATHODE RAY OSCILLOSCOPE
Alternating voltages and currents
AC Circuits AC Current peak-to-peak and rms Capacitive Reactiance
6.1 Alternating current and power
Chapter 22: AC Circuits Figure (a) Direct current. (b) Alternating current.
Sinusoidal Waveform Phasor Method.
CATHODE RAY TUBE.
Higher Physics Electricity.
Electrons Thermionic Emission
Cfe Higher Physics Unit 3.1 Alternating Current and Voltage.
C H A P T E R 11 A.C. Fundamentals.
Presentation transcript:

AS Physics Unit 1 6 Alternating Currents AS Physics Unit 1 6 Alternating Currents Mr D Powell

Mr Powell 2009 Index Chapter Map

Mr Powell 2009 Index 6.1 Alternating Current & Power Specification link-up 3.1.3: Current electricity: alternating currents What is an alternating current? What do we mean by the rms value of an alternating current? How can we calculate the power supplied by an alternating current? Specification link-up 3.1.3: Current electricity: alternating currents What is an alternating current? What do we mean by the rms value of an alternating current? How can we calculate the power supplied by an alternating current?

Mr Powell 2009 Index * An AC repeatedly reverses its direction * In one cycle the charge carriers move in one direction then the other. 6.1 Alternating current and power AC measurements Frequency: f (Hz) Peak to peak value Peak value AC is used for power distribution because the peak voltage can be easily changed using transformers * Mains frequency is 50 Hz,

Mr Powell 2009 Index 6.1 Alternating current and power Peak to peak value Peak value One cycle * Mains frequency is 50 Hz, one cycle lasts 1/50 sec = 0.02 sec = time period T f = 1 T

Mr Powell 2009 Index varies according to the square of the current 6.1 Alternating current and power The heating effect of an alternating current: P = I V = I 2 R =V 2 /R R = resistance of heater At peak current I o maximum power is supplied = I o 2 R At zero current zero power is supplied Equal areas above and below mean value also Av value of a sin 2 plot = 1/2 Mean power supplied = ½ I o 2 R Average Power when sine term -> 0.5

Mr Powell 2009 Index

Mr Powell 2009 Index 6.1 Alternating current and power

Mr Powell 2009 Index 6.1 Alternating current and power The mean power supplied to a resistor:

Mr Powell 2009 Index GCSE Link.... RMS Peak..... Direct Eqiv..... The rms value is times the peak value, and the peak value is 1.41 times the value the voltmeter shows. The peak value for 230 V mains is 325 V.

Mr Powell 2009 Index For AC clearly for most of the time it is less than the peak voltage, so this is not a good measure of its real effect. Instead we use the root mean square voltage (V RMS ) which is 0.7 of the peak voltage (V peak ): V RMS = 1/Sqrt(2) × V peak and V peak = sqrt(2) × V RMS These equations also apply to current. The RMS value is the effective value of a varying voltage or current. It is the equivalent steady DC (constant) value which gives the same effect. For example a lamp connected to a 6V RMS AC supply will light with the same brightness when connected to a steady 6V DC supply. However, the lamp will be dimmer if connected to a 6V peak AC supply because the RMS value of this is only 4.2V (it is equivalent to a steady 4.2V DC). You may find it helps to think of the RMS value as a sort of average, but please remember that it is NOT really the average! In fact the average voltage (or current) of an AC signal is zero because the positive and negative parts exactly cancel out! RMS Values Summary....

Mr Powell 2009 Index What do AC meters show, is it the RMS or peak voltage? AC voltmeters and ammeters show the RMS value of the voltage or current. DC meters also show the RMS value when connected to varying DC providing the DC is varying quickly, if the frequency is less than about 10Hz you will see the meter reading fluctuating instead. What does '6V AC' really mean, is it the RMS or peak voltage? If the peak value is meant it should be clearly stated, otherwise assume it is the RMS value. In everyday use AC voltages (and currents) are always given as RMS values because this allows a sensible comparison to be made with steady DC voltages (and currents), such as from a battery. For example a '6V AC supply' means 6V RMS, the peak voltage is 8.6V. The UK mains supply is 230V AC, this means 230V RMS so the peak voltage of the mains is about 320V! So what does root mean square (RMS) really mean? First square all the values, then find the average (mean) of these square values over a complete cycle, and find the square root of this average. That is the RMS value. Confused? Ignore the maths (it looks more complicated than it really is), just accept that RMS values for voltage and current are a much more useful quantity than peak values. More on Measurement...

Mr Powell 2009 Index 6.1 Alternating current and power

Mr Powell 2009 Index 6.1 Alternating current and power

Mr Powell 2009 Index

Mr Powell 2009 Index

Mr Powell 2009 Index 6.2 Using an Oscilloscope Specification link-up 3.1.3: Current electricity: Oscilloscopes How do we use an oscilloscope as a dc voltmeter? How do we use it as an ac voltmeter? How do we use an oscilloscope to measure frequency? Specification link-up 3.1.3: Current electricity: Oscilloscopes How do we use an oscilloscope as a dc voltmeter? How do we use it as an ac voltmeter? How do we use an oscilloscope to measure frequency?

Mr Powell 2009 Index Inside a scope...

Mr Powell 2009 Index The Cathode Ray Oscilloscope (CRO) T h i s p r e s e n t a t i o n w i l l p r o b a b l y i n v o l v e a u d i e n c e d i s c u s s i o n, w h i c h w i l l c r e a t e a c t i o n i t e m s. U s e P o w e r P o i n t t o k e e p t r a c k o f t h e s e a c t i o n i t e m s d u r i n g y o u r p r e s e n t a t i o n I n S l i d e S h o w, c l i c k o n t h e r i g h t m o u s e b u t t o n S e l e c t M e e t i n g M i n d e r S e l e c t t h e A c t i o n I t e m s t a b T y p e i n a c t i o n i t e m s a s t h e y c o m e u p C l i c k O K t o d i s m i s s t h i s b o x T h i s w i l l a u t o m a t i c a l l y c r e a t e a n A c t i o n I t e m s l i d e a t t h e e n d o f y o u r p r e s e n t a t i o n w i t h y o u r p o i n t s e n t e r e d.

Mr Powell 2009 Index The Deflection tube…a basic CRO

Mr Powell 2009 Index The CRO + electronic bits….

Mr Powell 2009 Index The time base signal... Voltage across X plates

Mr Powell 2009 Index The traces we get with time base off d.c input upper plate positive d.c input lower plate positive no input – spot adjusted left no input a.c input d.c input upper plate more positive

Mr Powell 2009 Index The traces we get with time base on high frequency a.c. input low frequency a.c input no input d.c input – upper plate positive d.c input – lower plate positive a.c input with a diode

Mr Powell 2009 Index The basic workings of TV... 3 guns rather than 1 The shadow mask is one of two major technologies used to manufacture cathode ray tube (CRT) televisions and computer displays that produce color images (the other is aperture grille). Tiny holes in a metal plate separate the coloured phosphors in the layer behind the front glass of the screen. The holes are placed in a manner ensuring that electrons from each of the tube's three cathode guns reach only the appropriately-coloured phosphors on the display. All three beams pass through the same holes in the mask, but the angle of approach is different for each gun. The spacing of the holes, the spacing of the phosphors, and the placement of the guns is arranged so that for example the blue gun only has an unobstructed path to blue phosphors. The red, green, and blue phosphors for each pixel are generally arranged in a triangular shape (sometimes called a "triad"). All early color televisions and the majority of CRT computer monitors, past and present, use shadow mask technology. This principle was first proposed by Werner Flechsig in a German patent in 1938.cathode ray tube televisionscomputer displayscoloraperture grillephosphorselectronsred greenbluepixeltriangulartriad

Mr Powell 2009 Index Lissajous curves Prior to modern computer graphics, Lissajous curves were typically generated using an oscilloscope (as illustrated). Two phase-shifted sinusoid inputs are applied to the oscilloscope in X-Y mode and the phase relationship between the signals is presented as a Lissajous figure. Lissajous curves can also be traced mechanically by means of a harmonograph.oscilloscope harmonograph In oscilloscope we suppose x is CH1 and y is CH2, A is amplitude of CH1 and B is amplitude of CH2, a is frequency of CH1 and b is frequency of CH2, so a/b is a ratio of frequency of two channels, finally, δ is the phase shift of CH1. When the input to an LTI system is sinusoidal, the output will be sinusoidal with the same frequency, but it may have a different amplitude and some phase shift. Using an oscilloscope which has the ability to plot one signal against another signal (as opposed to one signal against time) produces an ellipse which is a Lissajous figure with of the case a = b in which the eccentricity of the ellipse is a function of the phase shift. The figure below summarizes how the Lissajous figure changes over different phase shifts. The phase shifts are all negative so that delay semantics can be used with a causal LTI system. The arrows show the direction of rotation of the Lissajous figure.LTI systemoscilloscopeeccentricitydelaysemanticscausal

Mr Powell 2009 Index

Mr Powell 2009 Index

Mr Powell 2009 Index

Mr Powell 2009 Index

Mr Powell 2009 Index An a.c. dynamo or generator

Mr Powell 2009 Index + Peak value V 0 V T - Draw a graph to show the variation of voltage with time.

Mr Powell 2009 Index Draw the graph to show the variation of current with time.

Mr Powell 2009 Index Draw the graph to show the variation of power with time.

Mr Powell 2009 Index Compare this with a d.c circuit

Mr Powell 2009 Index Draw a graph to show the variation of voltage with time.

Mr Powell 2009 Index Draw a graph to show the variation of current with time.

Mr Powell 2009 Index Draw a graph to show the variation of power with time.

Mr Powell 2009 Index Now, you know that P = I V and V = I R So P = I 2 R

Mr Powell 2009 Index The mean power is the average value of power over one complete cycle I 0 = Peak current Peak power = I 0 2 R Mean power = ½ I 0 2 R The root mean square (rms) or effective value of an alternating current or pd, is the value of direct current or pd which would supply the same power in a given resistor.

Mr Powell 2009 Index Example.... A 2 W resistor passes an alternating current of a peak value of 3 A. Calculate the peak power, the mean power and the rms or effective value of the alternating current. The peak power = I 0 2 R = 3 2 x 2 = 18 W The mean power = ½ I 0 2 R = ½ x 18 = 9 W

Mr Powell 2009 Index What value of direct current through the 2 W resistor gives 9W of power? Let the equivalent direct current = I I 2 R = 9W I 2 X 2 = 9 I = 4.5 I = 2.12 A

Mr Powell 2009 Index So a direct current of 2.12 A gives the same power as 3A alternating current.

Mr Powell 2009 Index So peak power P = I 0 2 R Mean power = ½ I 0 2 R rms value (I rms ) (I rms ) 2 R = ½ I 0 2 R So (I rms ) = I 0 / 2

Mr Powell 2009 Index Calculate the rms value of the alternating current if a 16 ohm resistor passes an a.c. with a peak value of 5A.

Mr Powell 2009 Index R = 16 I 0 = 5A (I rms ) 2 R = ½ I 0 2 R So (I rms ) = I 0 / 2 = 5/ 2 = 3.53A