Triac Heatup: 1000W Draw - Same Rate?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Smed
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
In a comparison of two 120V AC circuits with triacs controlling heat elements, the circuit with a 50% duty cycle will heat up more than the one with a continuous gate on, despite both drawing 1000W. This is due to the triac conducting the same power in a shorter time frame, leading to increased heating. The triac in the second circuit is undersized for the 2000W load, presenting a fire hazard when exceeding 15A. Variations in triac quality can also affect performance, particularly under high loads. Additionally, using non-zero-point switching can introduce extra power during the triac's activation.
Smed
Messages
36
Reaction score
1
Let's say I have two separate 120V AC circuits, each with a triac (15A) that controls a heat element. The first circuit has a heat element that draws a maximum of 1000W. The second circuit heat element draws 2000W. In the first circuit, I leave the triac gate on at all times, and in the second circuit, the triac has a 50% duty cycle, so that the total power drawn is 1000W.

If both of these circuits draw 1000W, will both triacs heat up at the same rate?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Actually no, the one with the 50% duty cycle (estimated) will probably heat up more, because is is conducting the same power in less time. If this is 120V Branch ckts, the triac is undersized for the 2000W load. Also - there is pretty big variation between types / quality of triac dimmers, so running at > 15A is likely a fire hazard.
 
Assume the triac has a fixed resistance. Since power is I^2 * R, if there is twice the current, there is 4X the power. 4X the power for 1/2 the time is 2X the power (on average).

Also, if you do not use zero-point switching there will be additional power when the triac switches on.
 
Hi all I have some confusion about piezoelectrical sensors combination. If i have three acoustic piezoelectrical sensors (with same receive sensitivity in dB ref V/1uPa) placed at specific distance, these sensors receive acoustic signal from a sound source placed at far field distance (Plane Wave) and from broadside. I receive output of these sensors through individual preamplifiers, add them through hardware like summer circuit adder or in software after digitization and in this way got an...
I have recently moved into a new (rather ancient) house and had a few trips of my Residual Current breaker. I dug out my old Socket tester which tell me the three pins are correct. But then the Red warning light tells me my socket(s) fail the loop test. I never had this before but my last house had an overhead supply with no Earth from the company. The tester said "get this checked" and the man said the (high but not ridiculous) earth resistance was acceptable. I stuck a new copper earth...
I am not an electrical engineering student, but a lowly apprentice electrician. I learn both on the job and also take classes for my apprenticeship. I recently wired my first transformer and I understand that the neutral and ground are bonded together in the transformer or in the service. What I don't understand is, if the neutral is a current carrying conductor, which is then bonded to the ground conductor, why does current only flow back to its source and not on the ground path...
Back
Top