Sinusoidal Alternating Waveforms - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 46
About This Presentation
Title:

Sinusoidal Alternating Waveforms

Description:

simple to generate from rotating machines ... maintains shape through capacitors and inductors. can be stepped up or down with transformers. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:129
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 47
Provided by: timothy136
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Sinusoidal Alternating Waveforms


1
Sinusoidal Alternating Waveforms
  • Chapter 13
  • Sinusoids and Amplitude

2
Syllabus
  • Review handout
  • Any questions??

3
Introduction
  • Circuits 1 is dc with the assumption of constant
    dc.
  • Circuits 2 is alternating current, where the
    signal varies with time.
  • Furthermore signal is periodic that is it
    repeats in uniform time.
  • Commonly ac refers to a sinusoidal voltage, the
    case for 99 of this class.

4
Why Sinusoids
  • Sinusoid demonstrate with O-scope.
  • simple to generate from rotating machines
  • maintains its shape through sums, products,
    integration and differentiation.
  • maintains shape through capacitors and inductors
  • can be stepped up or down with transformers.

5
Non-sinusoidal Waveforms
  • With all those properties, sinusoids are not the
    be-all end-all.
  • Recent electronics makes use of many non
    sinusoidal waveforms.
  • ac periodic waveform could be square, or
    triangle, etc.
  • However, can analyze any (well-behaved) periodic
    waveform as a sum of sinusoids.

6
Sinusoidal ac Voltage Characteristics and
Definitions
  • 13.2

7
Definition Waveform
  • Typically shown graphically as
  • amplitude (or range)
  • voltage
  • current
  • power
  • domain
  • time
  • distance
  • degrees
  • radians

range
domain
8
Sinusoid Example
9
The Sine Wave
  • A cycle can be measured in time
  • or as the distance between successive similar
    points
  • Represent one period as a circle.
  • Whats the distance around a circle?
  • Circumference 2 pi radius
  • choose a circle of unit radius (r 1)
  • Circumference 2 pi

10
Period
  • The time required for one repetition of a
    waveform.
  • Standard notation T
  • Measured from any point until that point is
    repeated.

11
Period
T 2 seconds
T
12
Cycle
  • The portion of a waveform contained in one
    period.
  • The waveform has cycled from a starting point
    to where that starting point is repeated.
  • The period then measures the time of one cycle
    or seconds per cycle.

13
Frequency
  • Answers how often do cycles occur?
  • Frequency is then the number of cycles per
    second.
  • Frequency is the inverse of the period.
  • Standard notation lowercase f.
  • Units of Hertz.

14
Frequency
T 2 seconds gt f 0.5 Hz or 1/2 cycle in one
second.
15
Instantaneous Value
  • magnitude of the waveform at any instant of
    time.
  • give me a time, Ill tell you a magnitude
  • one time, one value
  • standard notation lower case letters, v, i.

16
Instantaneous Value
0.3 sec gt 140 v
17
Peak Amplitude
  • Maximum instantaneous value of the waveform
    measured from average
  • standard notation uppercase letters

18
Peak Amplitude
Average 0, peak amplitude 170 v
19
Peak Value
  • maximum instantaneous value of a waveform
    measured from zero volts.
  • highest value reached
  • no standard notation. Must indicate or describe.

20
Peak Value
220 volts
21
Peak to Peak Value
  • Difference between highest and lowest values of
    the waveform
  • standard notation Vp-p or Ip-p

22
Peak to Peak Value
Vp-p 340 volts
23
The Sine Wave
  • A cycle can be measured in time
  • or as the distance between successive similar
    points
  • Represent one period as a circle.
  • Whats the distance around a circle?
  • Circumference 2 pi radius
  • choose a circle of unit radius (r 1)
  • Circumference 2 pi

24
Radians
  • Radians measure the distance around a unit
    circle.

2 p radians
25
Degrees
  • For convenience, the Babylonians chose to
    measure a circle in fractions of 360 degrees.
  • 360 is evenly divisible by prime numbers 2, 2,
    2, 3, 3, 5. And thus any combination of those
    primes.
  • 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 ...
  • This measure is not based on length, but on angle.

26
Degrees
  • Degrees measure an angular fraction of a circle.

360 degrees
27
Unit Circle
p/2
Quadrant II
Quadrant I
90
p
0
2p
Quadrant IV
Quadrant III
3p/2
28
Unit Circle
p/2
3p/4
p/4 45
p
0
2p
7p/4
5p/4
3p/2
29
Unit Circle
p/2
p/3
p/6
60
p
30
0
2p
3p/2
30
Radians Degrees
  • Equivalence or conversion between radians and
    degrees is based on

31
Rotating Vector
  • A sinusoid is the projection of a rotating
    radius vector on a time varying waveform plot.
  • The rate of the radius vector motion is
    distance/time in units of radians/second.

32
Angular Velocity
  • standard notation Greek lower case Omega.

33
Frequency
  • For once around the circle, 2 pi distance is
    covered in one period of time.

34
General Format for the Sinusoidal Voltage or
Current
  • Most general form

35
Constant Offset
  • A sinusoid could be offset from zero by the
    addition of a dc source.


e
C E
36
Phase Relations
  • Suppose you choose a starting time reference
    when the amplitude is not zero going positive?
  • The shift from zero can be mathematically
    accounted in a phase angle.
  • Standard notation Greek lowercase theta.

37
Phase Angle
This waveform starts about 2/3 of the way to the
maximum.
38
Phase Angle Example
39
Phase Relationship
  • A phase angle is only meaningful as a
    comparison.
  • Usually an arbitrary zero phase angle is chosen.
  • Other waveforms are then compared to that zero
    reference.

40
Phase Angle Calculation
This is a ratio and proportion problem. The
phase difference is the ratio of separation of
the sinusoids compared to a complete period.
41
Lead-Lag
The pink waveform leads the blue by 60 degrees.
Blue is the reference. Or the blue lags the pink
by 60 degrees.
42
Lead - Lag
  • If a waveform has an instantaneous value greater
    than zero at the domain 0 reference, then that
    waveform LEADS the reference.
  • If instantaneous value less than zero, LAGS.
  • 180 degrees is maximum lead.

43
Maximum Lead-Lag
  • The maximum lead or lag is 180? or ½ cycle.
  • Instead of saying a waveform leads by 300?, say
    the waveform lags by 60?.

44
Example Phase Relationship
45
Example Phase Relationship
  • C goes through zero positive 120 degrees after A
  • C lags A by 120 degrees
  • B goes through zero positive 240 degrees after A
  • B LEADS A by 120 degrees
  • recall maximum lead/lag of 180 degrees
  • B lags C by 120 degrees

46
Phase Measurements
  • Compare distance between waveforms with period.
  • Phase relations are only meaningful if the
    frequency is the same.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com