What is the Phase Angle of an LRC Circuit with Given Components and Frequency?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the phase angle in an LRC circuit consisting of a 35 mH inductor, a 20 µF capacitor, and a 60 Hz voltage source. The original poster attempts to calculate the phase angle using the impedance formula but encounters confusion regarding the correct interpretation of the phase angle in relation to current and voltage.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the relationship between voltage, current, and impedance, questioning the correct phase angle to calculate. They discuss the implications of using Ohm's law in AC circuits and the significance of the angles involved in complex numbers.

Discussion Status

There is an ongoing exploration of the correct phase angle, with participants providing guidance on how to approach the problem. Some participants suggest that the original poster may need to reconsider the interpretation of the phase angle in relation to the current and voltage, while others point out potential issues with significant figures in the answer.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the phrasing of the question may lead to confusion regarding whether the phase angle refers to the current with respect to the voltage or the impedance. There is also mention of the need to adhere to significant figures based on the given data.

ooohffff
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Homework Statement


A 35 mH inductor with 1.0
omegacap.gif
resistance is connected in series to a 20 µF capacitor and a 60 Hz, 40-V (rms) source. Calculate the phase angle.

Homework Equations


tan φ = (XL - XC) / R

The Attempt at a Solution


Solving for φ:

φ = tan -1 [(XL - XC) / R]

XL = 2πfL = 13.194 Ω
XC = 1/(2πfC) = 132.63 Ω
R=1Ω

Plugging those values in I get
Φ = -89.5° = 270.48°

I submitted the 270.48 but it's wrong?
 
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What you've found is the phase angle of the impedance. You want the phase angle of the current. What law relates the current to the voltage and impedance?
 
gneill said:
What you've found is the phase angle of the impedance. You want the phase angle of the current. What law relates the current to the voltage and impedance?

Ohm's law I=V/Z ?
 
ooohffff said:
Ohm's law I=V/Z ?
Yup. What will be the current's angle if your Z's angle is -89.5° ?
 
gneill said:
Yup. What will be the current's angle if your Z's angle is -89.5° ?
Would it be tan φ = (VL - VC) / Z ? If not then I'm thoroughly confused.
 
No. The only voltage of consequence here is the supply voltage. If this was a DC circuit with resistors you'd write I = V/R. In this AC circuit you write I = V/Z.

V is the source voltage that also serves as the reference for the phase angle. As such its phase angle is 0°. Your Z has a phase angle of -89.5°. So what's the phase angle of V/Z? (How do you handle angles when you do a division)?
 
gneill said:
No. The only voltage of consequence here is the supply voltage. If this was a DC circuit with resistors you'd write I = V/R. In this AC circuit you write I = V/Z.

V is the source voltage that also serves as the reference for the phase angle. As such its phase angle is 0°. Your Z has a phase angle of -89.5°. So what's the phase angle of V/Z? (How do you handle angles when you do a division)?

Would you break it into components like:
I = (40/(Zcosφ)) i + (40/(Zsinφ)) j

and then find the angle of I?
 
No need. You have the angles already. There's a simple rule for dividing two complex numbers when you know the angles. What's the rule?
 
gneill said:
No need. You have the angles already. There's a simple rule for dividing two complex numbers when you know the angles. What's the rule?

I just derived this because I don't think I know what you're talking about or I'm misguided, but I got tan-1 (cotφ)
 
  • #10
No, you're getting way too complicated. When you divide two numbers in complex polar form you simply subtract the angle of the denominator from the angle of the numerator:

##\frac{a ∠ θ}{b ∠ φ} = \left(\frac{a}{b}\right) ∠ (θ - φ)##
 
  • #11
gneill said:
No, you're getting way too complicated. When you divide two numbers in complex polar form you simply subtract the angle of the denominator from the angle of the numerator:

##\frac{a ∠ θ}{b ∠ φ} = \left(\frac{a}{b}\right) ∠ (θ - φ)##
But then the resulting angle would be at 89.5°?
 
  • #12
ooohffff said:
But then the resulting angle would be at 89.5°?
I've tried that before initially but that angle was also incorrect.
 
  • #13
ooohffff said:
But then the resulting angle would be at 89.5°?
Yes. That should be the phase angle of the current with respect to the voltage.

ooohffff said:
I've tried that before initially but that angle was also incorrect.
You tried +89.5° and it was considered incorrect? Perhaps they're being picky about significant figures?
 
  • #14
gneill said:
Yes. That should be the phase angle of the current with respect to the voltage.You tried +89.5° and it was considered incorrect? Perhaps they're being picky about significant figures?

Yup. That was the first one I tried with the equation: φ = cos -1 (R/Z) = 89.52028539°

Yes, maybe I should try with more sig figs.
 
  • #15
How many significant figures does the given data suggest?
 
  • #16
gneill said:
How many significant figures does the given data suggest?

Ah I figured out the problem! My original answer in this post -89.5° was correct. The mistake I made was that I should not have converted it to 270.48°, since technically φ should be negative since XC > XL, and you should generally take the smaller angle of the angles between two vectors.
 
  • #17
What was the exact phrasing of the question as you received it? Generally "phase angle", unless qualified, refers to the phase angle of the current with respect to the voltage. Were they only looking for the phase angle of the impedance?
 
  • #18
gneill said:
What was the exact phrasing of the question as you received it? Generally "phase angle", unless qualified, refers to the phase angle of the current with respect to the voltage. Were they only looking for the phase angle of the impedance?

That is the exact phrasing of the question. That phase angle, according to the formula that I used, should be the angle between voltage and current, not impedance and current.

tanΦ = (VL-VC )/ VR = (XL - XC)/ R
 
  • #19
Yes, it yields the angle associate with the impedance which is also the phase angle of the current with respect to the voltage.

But as I mentioned previously, unless otherwise specified, generally when one talks about phase angle one is referring to the phase angle of the current with respect to that of the voltage, not the voltage with respect to the current. Basically, I'm not very happy with the problem as it is presented. But if you reached the answer that they're looking for, not much more can be said :smile:
 

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