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Alternating Current Electricity Lesson 11

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Alternating Current. Electricity Lesson 11. Learning Objectives. To know what is meant by alternating current. To know how to calculate the rms value of an alternating current. To know how to calculate the power supplied by an alternating current. Recap. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Alternating Current

Alternating Current

Electricity Lesson 11

Page 2: Alternating Current

Learning Objectives

To know what is meant by alternating current.

To know how to calculate the rms value of an alternating current.

To know how to calculate the power supplied by an alternating current.

Page 3: Alternating Current

Recap

What is the difference between an alternating current and a direct current?

phet simulation (AC connected to 1 ohm resistor).

Page 4: Alternating Current

Definition

From the specification book:-

An alternating current (ac) is a current that repeatedly reverses its direction.

Page 5: Alternating Current

Questions

What is frequency? What is the unit of frequency?

What is the frequency of mains electricity?

Calculate the period of mains electricity.

Page 6: Alternating Current

Answers

Frequency is the number of cycles per second.

The unit of frequency is the hertz (Hz)

Mains electricity is an alternating current with a frequency of 50 Hz too fast to notice flickering.

frequency

1period s

fT 020.0

Hz 50

11

Page 7: Alternating Current

Peak Value

The peak value of an alternating current (or pd) is the maximum current (or pd) which is the same in either direction.

One complete alternation is called a cycle (NOT wavelength).

The graph is called a sinusoidal waveform or a sine wave.

Page 8: Alternating Current

Peak Current

This depends on the peak pd and the components in circuit.

If the peak pd was 260 V and the resistance of the components in the circuit is 56 Ω, what would the peak current be?

Page 9: Alternating Current

Peak Current

This depends on the peak pd and the components in circuit.

If the peak pd was 260 V and the resistance of the components in the circuit is 56 Ω, what would the peak current be?

A 64.4 56

V 260

R

VI

Page 10: Alternating Current

Why do we use ac?

Page 11: Alternating Current

Important Physics Ideas

Conservation of energy (power in=power out).

Faraday's law of induction (changing magnetic field induces a electric current).

Ampere’s law (electric current passing through a wire results in magnetic field around it).

Page 12: Alternating Current

Why do we use ac? Power dissipated in the wires =I2/R. So we want to transmit electricity using low I.

Transformers can be used to change the pd of ac.

Power going into transformer = Power going out of transformer (Pi = Po) (IiVi=IoVo).

An electric current only gets induced in a wire when there is a changing magnetic field.

There is only a changing magnetic field if there is a changing electric field i.e. alternating pd.

Page 13: Alternating Current

Observing AC

An oscilloscope can be used to display the waveform of the alternating pd from a signal generator. Demo

What effect does increasing the output pd have?

What effect does increasing the frequency have?

Page 14: Alternating Current

These features are shown on the graph:

Page 15: Alternating Current

Heating Effect of AC Imagine a heater connected to an ac supply.

It would repeatedly heat up then cool down.

The power, P, supplied to a heater of resistance R:-

Recall that direction of the current doesn’t matter so the power supplied varies with the square of the current.

RIP 2

Page 16: Alternating Current

Heating Effect of AC

When I is at its maximum, I0, max. power is supplied.

When I is zero, zero power is supplied.

The mean power supplied:-

This is from the symmetrical shape of the power curve.

RIP 202

1mean

Page 17: Alternating Current

Root Mean Square Value

The root mean square value of an alternating current is the value of direct current that would give the same heating effect as the alternating current in the same resistor.

RII 202

12rms R

202

12rms II

2

II 0

rms

2

VV 0

rms

R2rmsIP

Page 18: Alternating Current

Question 1

What is the rms voltage of an ac mains with a peak voltage of 325 V?

What would be the power supplied to a 70 ohm resistor?

Page 19: Alternating Current

 Answer

Vrms = 325 / √2 = 230 V

 

R2rmsIP

R

VI rms

rms

Page 20: Alternating Current

Root Mean Square Value

The values of voltage and current are constantly changing in AC, unlike in DC in which they are steady.  We can measure AC voltages in two ways:-

Measure the peak to peak voltage, easily done on a cathode ray oscilloscope (CRO).

Measure the root mean square (rms) value, or the effective value.

We use the rms value because its use allows us to do electrical calculations as if they were direct currents. 

Page 21: Alternating Current

Summary