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Sinusoids and Phasors

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outline

Sinusoids

Phasors

Phasors relationships for circuit elements

The Impedance and Admittance Concept

Basic Circuit Analysis with Phasors

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Sinusoids
A sinusoid is a signal that has the form of the sine or
cosine function.

v Vm cos(t )
where Vm amplitude
angular frequency
t arg ument
phase angle

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t

v Vm cos(t )

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2 f radians/second
T (rad/s)
f is in hertz(Hz)
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v1 (t ) Vm1 cos( t 1 )
v2 (t ) Vm 2 cos( t 2 )
Phase difference:
( t 1 ) ( t 2 )
1 2
if 0 v1 and v 2 are out of phase
0 v1 and v 2 are in phase
0 v1 leads v 2 by
0 v1 lags v 2 by
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Complex Number

z x jy rectangula r form
z r polar form
z rcos jrsin sinusoidal form
z re j exponential form

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Phasor
a phasor is a complex number representing the amplitude
and phase angle of a sinusoidal voltage or current.

Eq.(8-1)

Eq. (8-2)

and Eq.(8-3)

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When Eq.(8-2) is applied to the general sinusoid we obtain

Eq.(8-4)

The phasor V is written as


Eq.(8-5)

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Fig. 8-1 shows a graphical representation commonly called
a phasor diagram.
Two features of the phasor concept
need emphasis:
1. Phasors are written in boldface
type like V or I to distinguish
them from signal waveforms
such as v(t) and i(t).
2. A phasor is determined by
Fig. 8-1: Phasor diagram
amplitude and phase angle and
does not contain any
information about the frequency
of the sinusoid.

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In summary, given a sinusoidal signal , the
corresponding phasor representation is . Conversely,
given the phasor , the corresponding sinusoid is found
by multiplying the phasor by and reversing the steps in
Eq.(8-4) as follows:

Eq.(8-6)

v(t ) Vm cos(t ) V Vm
Time domain Phase-domain
representation representation
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Properties of Phasors

additive property

Eq.(8-7)

Eq.(8-8)

Eq.(8-9)

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derivative property

Eq.(8-10)

dv
jV
dt
Time domain Phase-domain
representation representation
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Integral property
V
vdt j
Time domain Phase-domain
representation representation
The differences between v(t) and V:
1. v(t) is the instantaneous or time-domain representation,
while V is the frequency or phasor-domain
representation.
2. v(t) is a real signal which is time dependent, while V is
just a supposed value to simplify the analysis

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The complex exponential is sometimes called a rotating phasor,
and the phasor V is viewed as a snapshot of the situation at t=0.

Fig. 8-2: Complex exponential

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EXAMPLE 8-1
(a) Construct the phasors for the following signals:

(b) Use the additive property of phasors and the phasors


found in (a) to find v(t)=v1(t)+v2(t).
SOLUTION
(a) The phasor representations of v(t)=v1(t)+ v2(t) are

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(b) The two sinusoids have the same frequent so the additive
property of phasors can be used to obtain their sum:

The waveform corresponding to this phasor sum is

V2

1
V
V1
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EXAMPLE 8-2
(a) Construct the phasors representing the following signals:

(b) Use the additive property of phasors and the phasors found
in (a) to find the sum of these waveforms.
SOLUTION:
(a) The phasor representation of the three sinusoidal currents are

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(b) The currents have the same frequency, so the additive
property of phasors applies. The phasor representing the sum of
these current is

Fig. 8-4

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EXAMPLE 8-3
Use the derivative property of phasors to find the time derivative
of v(t)=15 cos(200t-30 ).

SOLUTION:
The phasor for the sinusoid is V=15-30 . According to
the derivative property, the phasor representing the dv/dt is
found by multiplying V by j .

The sinusoid corresponding to the phasor jV is

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Device Constraints in Phasor Form
Resistor: jIm
V

I
0
Re

Vm I m R
Voltage-current relations for a resistor in the: (a) time
domain, (b) frequency domain. V I
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Device Constraints in Phasor Form
Inductor:


Vm LI m
V I 90
Voltage-current relations for an inductor in the: (a) time
domain, (b) frequency domain.
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Device Constraints in Phasor Form
Capacitor:


I m CVm
Voltage-current relations for a capacitor in the:
I V 90
(a) time domain, (b) frequency domain.
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Connection Constraints in Phasor Form
KVL in time domain

Kirchhoff's laws in phasor form (in frequency domain)

KVL: The algebraic sum of phasor voltages around a loop is


zero.
KCL: The algebraic sum of phasor currents at a node is zero.

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The Impedance Concept
The IV constraints are all of the form
V=ZI or Z= V/I Eq.(8-16)

where Z is called the impedance of the element


The impedance Z of a circuit is the ratio of the phasor voltage
V to the phasor current I, measured in ohms()
Z R jX
where R Re Z is the resistance and X Im Z is the reactance.

The impedance is inductive when X is positive


is capacitive when X is negative

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The Impedance Concept
Z Z
X
where Z R 2 X 2 , tan 1
R
and R Z cos , X Z sin

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EXAMPLE 8-5

Fig. 8-5

The circuit in Fig. 8-5 is operating in the sinusoidal steady state


with and . Find the impedance of
the elements in the rectangular box.
SOLUTION:
Vs V1 V2 0

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I 3 V2 /RL 0.278 37.9

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The Admittance Concept
The admittance Y is the reciprocal of impedance,
measured in siemens (S)
1 I
Y
Z V
Y=G+jB
Where G=Re Y is called conductance and B=Im Y is called
the susceptance
1
G jB
How get Y=G+jB from R jX
Z=R+jX ? R X
G 2 , B 2
R X 2
R X2
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1
resistor : YR G
R
1
inductor : YL
jL
capacitor : YC jC

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Basic Circuit Analysis with Phasors

Step 1: The circuit is transformed into


the phasor domain by representing the
input and response sinusoids as phasor
and the passive circuit elements by
their impedances.
Step 2: Standard algebraic circuit
techniques are applied to solve the
phasor domain circuit for the desired
unknown phasor responses.
Step 3: The phasor responses are
inverse transformed back into time-
domain sinusoids to obtain the
response waveforms.

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Series Equivalence And Voltage Division

where R is the real part and X is the imaginary part

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EXAMPLE 8-6

Fig. 8-8
The circuit in Fig. 8 - 8 is operating in the sinusoidal steady
state with

(a) Transform the circuit into the phasor domain.


(b) Solve for the phasor current I.
(c) Solve for the phasor voltage across each element.
(d) Construct the waveforms corresponding to the phasors found
in (b) and (c)

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SOLUTION:

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PARALLEL EQUIVALENCE AND
CURRENT DIVISION
I
Rest of I1 I2 I3
the V Y
Y1
1 Y2 YN
circuit

phasor version of the current division principle

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EXAMPLE 8-9

Fig. 8-13
The circuit in Fig. 8-13 is operating in the sinusoidal
steady state with iS(t)=50cos2000t mA.
(a) Transform the circuit into the phasor domain.
(b) Solve for the phasor voltage V.
(c) Solve for the phasor current through each element.
(d) Construct the waveforms corresponding to the phasors
found in (b) and (c).

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SOLUTION:
(a) The phasor representing the input source current is
Is=0.050 A. The impedances of the three passive elements
are

Fig. 8-14
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And the voltage across the parallel circuit is

The current through each parallel branch is

The sinusoidal steady-state waveforms corresponding to the


phasors in (b) and (c) are

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EXAMPLE 8-10

Fig. 8-15

Find the steady-state currents i(t), and iC(t) in the circuit of


Fig. 8-15 (for Vs=100cos2000t V, L=250mH, C=0.5 F, and
R=3k ).

SOLUTION:
Vs=1000

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