Finding Voltage in Series RL Circuit

In summary, the conversation discusses the concepts of phasors, reactive and resistive voltages, and their relationship in a series and parallel circuit. The focus is on understanding the phase relationship between the voltage and current in a RL circuit and how it can be represented using phasor addition. The summary also includes a discussion on the proper units for representing voltage in a circuit and emphasizes the difference between series and parallel connections.
  • #1
Vishera
72
1

Homework Statement



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Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



This assigned question is an odd one since it doesn't seem to have anything to do with phasors which is the chapter I am currently studying.

I have this solution:

FGM825Y.png


I don't understand where they got that equation comes from. I have a feeling that it has to do with RMS which the textbook hasn't yet covered.
 
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  • #2
Do you recall how the phases of the voltages in the resistor and inductor are related?
 
  • #3
gneill said:
Do you recall how the phases of the voltages in the resistor and inductor are related?

I know that that the phase relationship in a RL circuit is that voltage leads current. Is that what you are referring to?
 
  • #4
Vishera said:
I know that that the phase relationship in a RL circuit is that voltage leads current. Is that what you are referring to?

That fact is intimately related to the question I posed. How does that translate into the relative phase of the potential drops across the R and L at any given time? Think of writing KVL around the loop.
 
  • #5
Here is my attempt at KVL:

$$0={ -\overrightarrow { V } }_{ AC }+85\overrightarrow { I } +{ V }_{ L }\overrightarrow { I } \\ \\ { \overrightarrow { V } }_{ AC }\quad seems\quad to\quad be\quad impossible\quad to\quad find\quad because\quad the\quad angular\quad frequency\quad was\quad not\quad given.\quad \\The\quad amplitude\quad is\quad 110V.\\ { V }_{ L }=j\omega \cdot ?\cdot \overrightarrow { I }$$

kdethyj.png


I regret using a question mark, ?, as the variable for the inductance of the inductor but it is too late to change now.
 
  • #6
You are not given component values for the resistor and inductor, you are only given the voltage across the resistor. So in your diagram the "85 Ω" is not correct. That should be "85 V" for the potential drop across the resistor. As a result your KVL equation is also not right.

However...

Let's take a slightly different approach. When you have a series circuit with reactive components (capacitors and/or inductors) drivin by some current I, then there will be a phase angle between the net voltage and the current. While the instantaneous voltage across the resistor will always be directly in phase with the current according to V = IR, the voltage across the reactive component will be out of phase with the current. You can represent the resulting mathematics with a voltage triangle.

attachment.php?attachmentid=67967&stc=1&d=1395686358.gif


This is essentially what's known as Phasor addition. The net voltage phasor is the 110 V on the hypotenuse. As you can see, the the Reactive (imaginary) component of the voltage phasor is at right angles to the Resistive (real). The components add just like the sides of a triangle, hence the ##110^2 = V_R^2 + V_L^2## equation.
 

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  • #7
Would this KVL equation be right?

$$0=-\overrightarrow { { V }_{ AC } } +85+\overrightarrow { { V }_{ L } } \overrightarrow { I }$$

Also, I think I get it know. I didn't realize resistor voltage was considered real and reactive voltage was considered imaginary.
 
  • #8
Vishera said:
Would this KVL equation be right?

$$0=-\overrightarrow { { V }_{ AC } } +85+\overrightarrow { { V }_{ L } } \overrightarrow { I }$$
It doesn't look right to me. You have a voltage, VL multiplied by a current (which yields power) and added to a voltage and a resistance. All in all a real mixup of units. Something like this would be better:
$$V_{AC} = I \cdot R + I \cdot jωL$$
with VAC and I being phasor variables.

Also, I think I get it know. I didn't realize resistor voltage was considered real and reactive voltage was considered imaginary.
Complex numbers are just a convenient way to represent phasor values, which have both magnitude and direction (phase). It makes the math easier than tying to work with rotating vectors...
 
  • #9
What if the circuit is slightly more complicated like below?

AYX4cUk.png


$${ V }_{ L }=\sqrt { { (85+30) }^{ 2 }+{ 110 }^{ 2 } }$$

Is that right?
 
  • #10
Nope. The units in the terms are not the same. 85 and 30 have the units Ohms (Ω). The 110 has units Volts (V).

Did you mean for the numbers above the resistors to be the voltage drops across those components?
 
  • #11
gneill said:
Nope. The units in the terms are not the same. 85 and 30 have the units Ohms (Ω). The 110 has units Volts (V).

Did you mean for the numbers above the resistors to be the voltage drops across those components?

Yes, I keep getting that wrong. Not sure why.

Last try:

lWAERUN.png


$${ V }_{ L }=\sqrt { { 110 }^{ 2 }+{ 100 }^{ 2 } } $$
 
  • #12
Sorry, nope again. Components in parallel all have the same potential difference across them. In this case VL = VR = 110 V
 
  • #13
gneill said:
Sorry, nope again. Components in parallel all have the same potential difference across them. In this case VL = VR = 110 V

But I thought there's a difference between resistive voltage and reactive voltage? Aren't they orthogonal in that right-angled triangle you drew? How can they be equal? Could you maybe draw a vector representation of VL or VR?

Edit: Would I be right saying that the magnitudes are equal? i.e. both have a magnitude of 110V but VL has 110V in the imaginary direction and VR has 110V in the real direction?
 
  • #14
Vishera said:
But I thought there's a difference between resistive voltage and reactive voltage? Aren't they orthogonal in that right-angled triangle you drew? How can they be equal? Could you maybe draw a vector representation of VL or VR?

In series, yes, there's a difference in the voltages. In parallel there cannot be... they are connected to the same nodes and any given node has the same potential everywhere. In a parallel connection it's the currents that can have different phases.

In a series connection the components all have identical current (it's a single continuous current path), but may have different voltages with different phase angles. In a parallel connection the components all share the same potential difference, but may have different currents with different phase angles.

In a series RL or RC circuit the current is the same for all components and the reactive components have a voltage phase angle of +/- 90° with respect to the current.

In a parallel circuit the voltage is the same for all components and the reactive components have a current phase angle of +/- 90° with respect to the voltage.
 
  • #15
I asked a couple of other people and they said VR and VL are 90 degrees out of phase. Would that be correct? This circuit is not a purely inductive circuit though, right? So they can't be 90 degrees out of phase, can they?
 
  • #16
Vishera said:
I asked a couple of other people and they said VR and VL are 90 degrees out of phase. Would that be correct? This circuit is not a purely inductive circuit though, right? So they can't be 90 degrees out of phase, can they?

If you're referring to the series RL circuit then yes, the two voltages will be 90° out of phase with each other. Take a look at the voltage triangle in post #6. If you assume that the reference angle is that of the voltage source, while the angles that the Resistor and Inductor voltages make with the reference are not 90°, a right angle angle exists between those two voltages themselves.

The phase angle associated with the circuit usually refers to the phase shift of the current with respect to the voltage.
 
  • #17
attachment.php?attachmentid=67967&stc=1&d=1395686358.gif


How do you know that the inductor's voltage is completely imaginary/reactive? Is it because ideal inductors have completely imaginary/reactive voltages? What about the inductor's current? Is that also completely imaginary/reactive?
 
  • #18
Vishera said:
attachment.php?attachmentid=67967&stc=1&d=1395686358.gif


How do you know that the inductor's voltage is completely imaginary/reactive? Is it because ideal inductors have completely imaginary/reactive voltages? What about the inductor's current? Is that also completely imaginary/reactive?

The voltage is specified by a phasor, which means that there is a phase angle associated with its waveform with respect to the reference angle (usually the source voltage waveform provides the reference). Complex values are a handy way to specify a phasor since they incorporate magnitude and phase angle. Just because there is a phase angle does not mean that the current is somehow not real, in the sense of being different from any other current. It's simply shifted in phase with respect to some reference angle.

In a series circuit if you imagine that there is some current flowing through the components, all of the components "see" the same current with the same phase. The voltage that develops across a given component is given by Ohm's law for impedance, namely V = I*Z. Z for resistance is purely real, so the voltage developed has the same angle as the current. Z for reactive components is purely imaginary so creates a phase shift due to the + or - j associated with the impedance. That's where the 90° phase shift comes in.

Where "real" and "imaginary" components of a current or voltage waveform become important is when we look at power. Resistors dissipate energy by converting it to heat. Reactive components are components that store and release energy and don't convert any of the power to heat; they absorb then return the energy doing no "real" work. However, even if no energy is lost in reactive components (the "imaginary" part of the power), the generator driving the load still has to produce the current that flows through those components. So it's sort of a "phantom" power requirement for the load that the generator must supply.
 
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  • #19
gneill said:
In a series circuit if you imagine that there is some current flowing through the components, all of the components "see" the same current with the same phase. The voltage that develops across a given component is given by Ohm's law for impedance, namely V = I*Z. Z for resistance is purely real, so the voltage developed has the same angle as the current. Z for reactive components is purely imaginary so creates a phase shift due to the + or - j associated with the impedance. That's where the 90° phase shift comes in.

Where "real" and "imaginary" components of a current or voltage waveform become important is when we look at power. Resistors dissipate energy by converting it to heat. Reactive components are components that store and release energy and don't convert any of the power to heat; they absorb then return the energy doing no "real" work. However, even if no energy is lost in reactive components (the "imaginary" part of the power), the generator driving the load still has to produce the current that flows through those components. So it's sort of a "phantom" power requirement for the load that the generator must supply.

Ah, that clarifies a lot and I feel like I finally understand it. Of course, in a RL Parallel circuit, the voltages would all be the same (with the same phase angle) and the phase angles would be different in the current because the impedance must be completely resistive for resistors and completely reactive for inductors.
 
  • #20
For anyone reading this in the future, this is how I would now solve this problem.

First, draw a diagram:

f7tHTTS.png


With basic series addition:

psqXbMw.png


And now we can draw this diagram to solve for V (labelled Vx in the diagram):

attachment.php?attachmentid=67967&stc=1&d=1395686358.gif
 

1. How do I calculate the voltage in a series RL circuit?

In order to calculate the voltage in a series RL circuit, you will need to use the formula V = I*R, where V represents voltage, I represents current, and R represents resistance. You will also need to use the formula V = I*(XL), where XL represents the inductive reactance. Then, you will need to add these two values together to find the total voltage in the circuit.

2. What is the difference between voltage and current in a series RL circuit?

Voltage is the potential difference between two points in a circuit, while current is the flow of electric charge through a circuit. In a series RL circuit, voltage is constant throughout the circuit, while current decreases as it flows through the resistor and inductor.

3. How does the inductor affect voltage in a series RL circuit?

An inductor in a series RL circuit causes the voltage to lag behind the current. This is because inductors resist changes in current, so when the current increases, the inductor creates a back electromotive force (EMF) that opposes the change in current. As a result, the voltage in the circuit is lower than expected.

4. What happens to the voltage in a series RL circuit when the current increases?

As the current increases in a series RL circuit, the voltage will also increase, but at a slower rate due to the presence of the inductor. This is because the inductor creates a back EMF that opposes the change in current, causing the voltage to lag behind.

5. How can I find the voltage drop across the inductor in a series RL circuit?

To find the voltage drop across the inductor in a series RL circuit, you can use the formula V = I*(XL), where V represents voltage, I represents current, and XL represents the inductive reactance. This will give you the voltage drop across the inductor, which you can then subtract from the total voltage to find the voltage drop across the resistor.

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