Engineering Calculating Resistance & Reactance of Load with PF 0.866 and 200V, 5A

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the equivalent series reactance and resistance of a load with a power factor of 0.866, a voltage of 200V, and a current of 5A. The correct formula for impedance is clarified as voltage equals current multiplied by impedance, leading to an impedance of 40 ohms. The relationship between resistance and reactance is explained using the power factor and the properties of a right triangle. Participants emphasize the distinction between impedance and reactance, with the reactance being one side of the triangle. The final calculation confirms that the resistance is 20 ohms, derived from the known impedance and power factor.
tofushop193
Messages
4
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


the power factor of a load is 0.866 lagging.the voltage is 200v and the current is 5A.caculate the equivalent series reactance and resistance of the load.



Homework Equations



cos.theta = power factor = resistance / impedence= 0.866
volt = ampere / impendence

The Attempt at a Solution



trying but still stuck at this question..can someone help me
btw i am new here if i did anything wrong please guide me...thanks guys
 
Physics news on Phys.org
tofushop193 said:

Homework Statement


the power factor of a load is 0.866 lagging.the voltage is 200v and the current is 5A.caculate the equivalent series reactance and resistance of the load.



Homework Equations



cos.theta = power factor = resistance / impedence= 0.866
volt = ampere / impendence

The Attempt at a Solution



trying but still stuck at this question..can someone help me
btw i am new here if i did anything wrong please guide me...thanks guys

First of all: Voltage = Current * Impedance (not /)
You know the voltage and the current. What is the total impedance?
The resistance and the inductive impedance form the sides of a right triangle, whose hypotenuse is the total impedance.
 
sorry about the wrong equiation given but i tried
200v=5A * impendence
so impendence = 200/5
= 40 ohm
but the answer given by my teacher is 20 ohm
is he wrong?
does equivalent series reactance means impendence??
 
\tilde{}I think you are mixing terms.

Impedance is the name given to the whole complex number, defined by Z=\frac{\tilde{V}}{\tilde{I}}=R+jX (tilde denotes phasors, hence both amplitudes and phases)

While reactance is defined as only the imaginary part of Z: X.

Also the power factor will be cos(\theta}=\frac{R}{|Z|}=\frac{R}{\sqrt{R^{2}+X^{2}}
(You got it almost right actually, I just want you to distinguish the impedance, which encodes amplitude and phase, from only the amplitude of the impedance)
 
hmm so how do i get the 20 ohm that my teacher did?
 
tofushop193 said:
hmm so how do i get the 20 ohm that my teacher did?
The reactance is one of the sides of the triangle. You already know the hypotenuse (40 ohm) and the cosine of the angle between the hypotenuse and the side representing the resistance (0.866).
You can calculate both sides.
 
so i take sine30*40 to get the 20 ohms?
 
tofushop193 said:
so i take sine30*40 to get the 20 ohms?
Exactly!
 
Back
Top