What is the peak current for this circuit?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the peak current in an RLC circuit with a sinusoidal voltage at 632 kHz, given specific resistance, capacitance, and inductance values. Participants note a potential error in the problem statement, as the peak voltage is incorrectly expressed in kilohms instead of volts. The correct approach involves using the impedance to find peak current, but confusion arises from mixing RMS and peak values in calculations. Suggestions include double-checking units and working backward from answer choices to identify the correct solution. Overall, clarity on the problem's wording and correct unit usage is essential for accurate calculations.
jacksonwiley
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Homework Statement



An RLC circuit has a sinusoidal voltage supplied to it at 632 kHz with a peak voltage of 748 kΩ; a 25 kΩ resistance; a 16 µF capacitance; and a 30 H inductance. What is the peak current for this circuit?
A) 30 μA
B) 26 μA
C) 6.3 μA
D) 11 μA



Homework Equations



Xc= 1/(2∏ƒC)
Z = √R^2 + (Xl-Xc)^2
Xl= 2∏ƒL


The Attempt at a Solution



Irms = Vrms / √R^2 + [(2∏ƒL) - (1/(2∏ƒC))]^2

when i plug everything in I am getting 4.7 x 10^-8 which is nowhere correct. I'm not sure if I'm doing something wrong in relation to the theory aspect when making the variable equation to plug everything into; but it seems right so I'm a little confused
 
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We can't check your working when you don't show it.

But I note that the question asks for peak current, and you show a formula with RMS. This may not necessarily be the problem, though.

You assumed the given elements are all to be connected in series. Was this stated?
 
NascentOxygen said:
We can't check your working when you don't show it.

But I note that the question asks for peak current, and you show a formula with RMS. This may not necessarily be the problem, though.

You assumed the given elements are all to be connected in series. Was this stated?

it doesn't say if its in series or parallel.
so i was just using the generalized RLC circuit equations.

(748,000)/ √(25000)^2 + [{2∏*(632,000)} - (1/(2∏*632,000* 16x10^-6))^2]
that's the work, its a lot to take in.
that gives the Irms .

i tried taking the voltage and using ohm's law but that also doesn't work so I'm really confused.
 
jacksonwiley said:

Homework Statement



An RLC circuit has a sinusoidal voltage supplied to it at 632 kHz with a peak voltage of 748 kΩ; a 25 kΩ resistance; a 16 µF capacitance; and a 30 H inductance. What is the peak current for this circuit?
A) 30 μA
B) 26 μA
C) 6.3 μA
D) 11 μA



Homework Equations



Xc= 1/(2∏ƒC)
Z = √R^2 + (Xl-Xc)^2
Xl= 2∏ƒL


The Attempt at a Solution



Irms = Vrms / √R^2 + [(2∏ƒL) - (1/(2∏ƒC))]^2

when i plug everything in I am getting 4.7 x 10^-8 which is nowhere correct. I'm not sure if I'm doing something wrong in relation to the theory aspect when making the variable equation to plug everything into; but it seems right so I'm a little confused

Check the problem wording: The peak voltage can not be given in kΩ. Also, the inductance looks too large.

If you divide the peak voltage with the impedance, you get peak current. Dividing rms voltage with the impedance results in rms current.

ehild
 
ehild said:
Check the problem wording: The peak voltage can not be given in kΩ. Also, the inductance looks too large.

If you divide the peak voltage with the impedance, you get peak current. Dividing rms voltage with the impedance results in rms current.

ehild

yeah i think that's just a mistake in the problem that I was given, because i double checked and it has voltage in ohms which is weird.

but the peak voltage/impedance works i think. thanks for the help!
 
jacksonwiley said:
yeah i think that's just a mistake in the problem that I was given, because i double checked and it has voltage in ohms which is weird.

but the peak voltage/impedance works i think. thanks for the help!

aw man okay, i did that and got 26 but its not right. i don't know what I'm missing.
 
OK, I missed the voltage being expressed in kΩ. In that case, you need a whole different set of obtuse formulae to solve it. :smile:

In other words, it's anyone's guess what the question should be. Do they mean V, or kV? And the same holds for the other data.

You could try working backwards from each answer, since there is consistency there in the units, and see what you end up with. Maybe try various permutations of units, e.g., Hz or kHz, H or mH, etc.

Good luck!
 
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