Determining Current and Voltage Drop in RLC Circuit

AI Thread Summary
In the RLC circuit discussion, participants calculated the current and voltage drops across a resistor, inductor, and capacitor connected in series with a time-varying emf. The current was determined to be approximately 0.11 A, while the individual voltage drops were calculated as 11 V across the resistor, 69.12 V across the inductor, and 21.88 V across the capacitor. A key issue raised was that the voltage drops did not sum to the source voltage of 50 V, leading to confusion regarding phase shifts and the timing of voltage peaks in the circuit. It was clarified that the voltages must add up to the source voltage at any moment, despite individual components reaching their maximum voltages at different times. Understanding the phase relationships among the components is essential for accurate calculations in resonant circuits.
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Homework Statement


A circuit contains a 100Ω resistor, a .0500H inductor, a .400μF capacitor, and a source of time-varying emf connected in series. The time-varying emf is 50.0 V at a frequency of 2000 Hz.

a) Determine the current in the circuit.
b) Determine the voltage drop across each component of the circuit.

Homework Equations


I = V / Z
Z = sqrt (R2+ (XL - XC)2)
XL = ωL
XC = 1 / (ωC)
ω = 2∏f
Vemf = VR + VC + VL (Kirchoff's Loop Rule)
V = IX, IR

The Attempt at a Solution



Using the above equations, I got XL to be 628.3 and XC to be 198. I got Z to be 441, and solved for I: I = 50/441 → .113 A to get the current. The issue is, when I get the voltage drops across the components, they don't add up to 50 V. For the inductor alone, I got V = IXL, which ended up being 71 V. I'm not sure where I'm going wrong with this problem.
 
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What do you get if you add the components? Did you consider the phase shift between the currents and voltages?
 
I got around 105 V when I add the components. As for the phase shift, I guess I didn't, but I'm not entirely sure what you mean by that.
 
When the capacitor has its maximal voltage, the current is zero, and the resistor has no voltage drop. When the resistor has its maximal voltage, the current is maximal, and the capacitor has no voltage drop.
And similar for the coil.

For every moment in time, the voltages have to add up to the source voltage. The maximal (or RMS) voltages of the individual components do not have to do that.
 
Ohh okay I get it. They all reach maximal points at different times, so I'm calculating each component's maximal voltage drop? Still, it wouldn't make sense for the inductor to have a maximal voltage that goes over 50 Volts.
 
Oh, that can make sense. You have a resonant circuit.
 
a) Determine the current in the circuit.
b) Determine the voltage drop across each component of the circuit.

XL = 628.32 ohm
XC = 198.94 ohm
Z = R + jXC - jXL
= 100 + j628.32 - j198.94
= 440.87 < 76.89° (phase angle)

current in the circuit,
I = V/Z = 0.11 < -76.89°A

voltage drop across each component of the circuit.
VR = I x R = (0.11 < -76.89°) x (100 < 0°) = 11<-76.89°V
VL = I x jXL = (0.11 < -76.89°) x (628.32 < 90°) = 69.12<13.11°V
VC = I x (-jXC) = (0.11 < -76.89°) x (198.94 < -90°) = 21.88<-166.89°V

how to calculate total voltage?
V = VR + VL + VC
= (11<-76.89°) + (69.12<13.11°) + (21.88<-166.89°)
= 48.50 < 2.05° v
 
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miazahara said:
a) Determine the current in the circuit.
b) Determine the voltage drop across each component of the circuit.

XL = 628.32 ohm
XC = 198.94 ohm
Z = R + jXC - jXL
= 100 + j628.32 - j198.94
= 440.87 < 76.89° (phase angle)

current in the circuit,
I = V/Z = 0.11 < -76.89°A

voltage drop across each component of the circuit.
VR = I x R = (0.11 < -76.89°) x (100 < 0°) = 11<-76.89°V
VL = I x jXL = (0.11 < -76.89°) x (628.32 < 90°) = 69.12<13.11°V
VC = I x (-jXC) = (0.11 < -76.89°) x (198.94 < -90°) = 21.88<-166.89°V

how to calculate total voltage?
V = VR + VL + VC
= (11<-76.89°) + (69.12<13.11°) + (21.88<-166.89°)
= 48.50 < 2.05° v
Hello @miazahara .

:welcome:

The thread you are responding to is more than 9 years old.

Generally, when replying to threads, posting complete solutions is not allowed.
 
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