Calculating Power Factor for an RC Circuit with Given R, C, and Frequency

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the power factor for an RC circuit connected to a 70Hz generator with an rms voltage of 125V, the relevant equations include P=IVcosθ and Z=√(R²+(1/ωC)²). The power factor is determined using cosθ = R/Z, where R is resistance and Z is impedance. After substituting the given values of R (105 ohms) and C (82.4 microfarads), the correct calculation yields a power factor of approximately 0.967. Discrepancies in earlier calculations were attributed to rounding errors and incorrect squaring of terms. Understanding the role of angular frequency (ω) is essential for accurate calculations.
just.karl
Messages
64
Reaction score
0
Find the power factor for an RC circuit connected to a 70Hz generator with an rms voltage of 125V. The values of R and C in this circuit are 105ohms and 82.4microfarads, respectively.


The equation I think you use is P=IVcos\oslash and also z= square root of R^2+(1/wc)^2 and cos0 = R/Z

I tried to put it together but nothing seemed to come out right, I couldn't figure out how to relate everything so that i could solve for the power factor. A push in the right direction would be nice. Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi just.karl,

just.karl said:
Find the power factor for an RC circuit connected to a 70Hz generator with an rms voltage of 125V. The values of R and C in this circuit are 105ohms and 82.4microfarads, respectively.


The equation I think you use is P=IVcos\oslash

This formula gives you the average power P. The power factor is just the \cos\theta part.
 
I understand that, so then it would be P/IV=cos0 but what I don't understand is how you relate the capacitor and frequency into it. Since I can solve for "I" and "P" by P=V^2/R and then find "I" by P=IR.
 
just.karl said:
I understand that, so then it would be P/IV=cos0 but what I don't understand is how you relate the capacitor and frequency into it. Since I can solve for "I" and "P" by P=V^2/R and then find "I" by P=IR.

I would use the other formula for cos(theta) that is in your original post:

cos(theta) = R / Z
 
If I use cos(theta) = R / Z then I don't use the voltage at all to solve for it?
 
just.karl said:
If I use cos(theta) = R / Z then I don't use the voltage at all to solve for it?

No, since they give you enough to find R and Z.
 
Alright.., when I plug in the numbers it comes out to be .9987 and the answer in the back of the book says .967. So that is probably just rounding error on my part I'm guessing?
 
just.karl said:
Alright.., when I plug in the numbers it comes out to be .9987 and the answer in the back of the book says .967. So that is probably just rounding error on my part I'm guessing?

I get an answer of 0.967163, so the discrepancy could be from rounding. Keep more digits and see if you get the right answer; if it still does not work, please post the actual input to your calculator.
 
Ah, I found what I did. I forgot to square (1/wC), it comes out with the right answer now. Thanks for your help! I really appreciate it.
 
  • #10
Sure, glad to help!
 
  • #11
Hi,
I am working on the same type problem. Can you tell me what the "w" represents in (1/wC) Thanks so much
 
  • #12
jessiepink said:
Can you tell me what the "w" represents in (1/wC) Thanks so much
Angular velocity (frequency), measured in radians per second, where a radian is numerically a unitless quantity equal to 1.
 
  • #13
thank you!
 

Similar threads

Back
Top