Capacitor to be connected to increase power factor

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the calculation of a capacitor value needed to improve the power factor of an RL circuit connected to a 240V, 50Hz supply. Participants explore the implications of power factor correction and the necessary calculations involved in determining the correct capacitor value.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant calculates the current and resistance, then attempts to find the necessary capacitance for unity power factor, arriving at 28.4uF based on their calculations.
  • Another participant points out an error in using apparent power (P=VI) to find current, suggesting that the voltage across the resistor should be used instead.
  • A third participant emphasizes the importance of understanding the RL circuit's impedance and suggests calculating the impedance magnitude to find the reactance.
  • One participant notes that referring to the process as merely "power factor correction" is misleading, as series resonance can significantly increase total power, potentially damaging the load.
  • Questions arise about the necessity of calculating impedance and its role in determining reactance.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the approach to calculating the capacitor value and the implications of power factor correction, indicating that multiple competing views remain without consensus on the correct method or understanding.

Contextual Notes

Participants have not resolved the assumptions regarding the use of apparent power versus actual power in their calculations, nor have they clarified the implications of series versus parallel capacitor configurations for power factor correction.

Nax13
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A resistance 'R' ohm and inductance of 'L' henry are connected across 240V, 50Hz supply. Power distributed in the circuit is 300W, and the voltage across R is 100V. In order to improve the power factor to unity, the capacitor to be connected in series should have a value of __.
a) 43.7 uF b) 4.37 uF c) 437 uF d) 0.437 uF

Step 1) Using P=V/I, got I=1.25A
Step 2) Using R=VR/I, got R=80 ohm
Step 3) Now since total voltage is 240V, VL is 240-100=140V
Step 4) Using XL=VL/I, got XL=112 ohm.
Step 5) For power factor to be unity, XL=XC, which means that XC should also be equal to 112 ohm, which leads me to the answer that C is 28.4uF. (since XC=1/2πfC)

Where did I go wrong? Any help would be appreciated. :wink:
 
Last edited:
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Where did I go wrong?

First line (ignoring the typo. P=V/I), you used P=VI to find I. This is incorrect, VI is the apparent power if you use the total voltage. If however you just use the voltage across the resistor ...
 
BTW. It is a poor exercise to refer to this a merely "power factor correction". Series resonating out a reactive element like this does a lot more than merely correcting power factor. In this case for example it increases the total power by a multiple of about 6. If the load was designed to run at 300W then it would likely be destroyed.

This is why PFC is normally done with a parallel capacitor.
 
Why is it necessary to calculate the impedance?
Btw, are all my other steps right?
 
Nax13 said:
Why is it necessary to calculate the impedance?

Because you want to find the reactance "X". So find the resistance "R", find the impedance magnitude |Z| and use R^2 + X^2 = |Z|^2 to solve for X.
 
Thanks for your help, uart and tim! :)
 

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