Finding Impedance Values in a Series Circuit at Different Frequencies

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In a series circuit connected to a power supply at 300Hz, the resistance (R) remains constant at 30 ohms while the reactances for the capacitor (Xc) and inductor (XL) vary with frequency. Calculations for XL and Xc at frequencies between 100-600Hz reveal resonance occurring around 200-212Hz, where the inductive and capacitive reactances nearly cancel each other out. The broad resonance is attributed to the relatively high series resistance compared to the low reactance values. The participant confirmed their calculations for the capacitor and inductor values, which were found to be approximately 26.5 microfarads and 21.2 mH, respectively. Overall, the discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding how resistance and reactance interact in a series circuit across varying frequencies.
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Homework Statement


My question is a series circuit is connected to a power supply set to 300Hz. At this frequency R=30 ohms, Xc=20 ohms, XL=40 ohms. I've then to work out values of R,Xc, XL at a range of frequencys from 100-600Hz.


Homework Equations


Xc=2x3.14xFxC, XL=2 x 3.14 x F x L


The Attempt at a Solution


I have worked out the values of XL, Xc which I'm fairly sure are correct, just wondering does R stay at the same value despite the change in frequency ? Any help greatly appreciated !
 
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Yes, R stays the same.

You would have worked out the actual values for the capacitor and the inductor and then worked out the reactances at other frequencies. Can you see that the coil and capacitor cancel each other out at some frequency?

So, what were your conclusions? Where is this circuit resonant?
Why is the resonance so broad?
 
I worked the capacitor out to be 26.5 microfarads, inductor 21.2mH by re-arranging the reactance equations, then I made a table for the reactance values at frequencies between 100-600Hz. The closest I got to reasonace was 200 Hz with a inductive reactance of 26.6ohms and capacitive reactance of 30 ohms, nearly cancelling out. I don't know why the reasonace is so broad ?
Thanks for your help.
 
Yes, those values seem close to what I got (so they must be right! ... :) ...)

I got resonance at about 212 Hz by calculating it directly. So this agrees with what you got when you took 100 Hz steps.

The resonance is very broad because of the large series resistance compared with the quite low values of reactance of the L and C at this frequency.
 
Thanks for your help it was very useful.

Thanks :)
 
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