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Electrical principles City and Guilds 2365 Certificate in Electro- technical Technology Level 3 Unit 1 Outcome 4 Session 1
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Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Dec 26, 2015

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Lenard Phillips
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Page 1: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Electrical principles

City and Guilds 2365Certificate in Electro-technical

TechnologyLevel 3

Unit 1 Outcome 4 Session 1

Page 2: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Session 1a.c circuits

Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are,

in relation to A.C and D.C supplies

Outcome 4

Electrical principles

Page 3: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Alternating Current (a.c.)

Alternating current or a.c. is the supply most common in the UK; this is due to a large number of economic and electrical factors.

The coil is free to rotate within the magnetic field, as the coil turns current is induced in the coil. This is tapped off at the slip rings.

The current in the coil varies depending on how much is being cut.

An alternating current is produced when a coil is placed within a magnetic field and allowed to rotate.

Page 4: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Sinusoidal Wave

The coil starts at a position where no magnetic flux is being cut.

The magnetic flux is shown by the lines between the magnets.

At this point if we were drawing a sinusoidal wave or sine wave

this would be the 0 on the wave form diagram.

Page 5: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Complete Sinusoidal Wave

1. It moves from zero up to a maximum in one direction.

2. It then moves from the maximum, back through zero

3. Then on to a maximum in the opposite direction,

4. Then to zero.

A standard sine wave.

When a sine wave has completed one of these sequences, it is then ready to begin another the same.

Each complete wave is called a ‘cycle’ or ‘period’.

The quantity of cycles in one second is called the ‘frequency’.

Page 6: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Frequency

The quantity of cycles in one second is called the frequency

The formula for frequency is;

Time is usually measured in seconds or milliseconds

1T =

f1

f = T

where T = time(s)

f = frequency (Hz)

A simple formula is attached to this

Frequency in the

UK is 50Hz.

Page 7: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Labelling a sine wave

The maximum or peak value cannot be the total useful current, power or voltage, as so much of the wave is less than the maximum. This is the average value.

This cannot be done over both positive and negative half cycles, as this would produce an average value of zero.

So to look at the average value of current or voltage we must only look at one of the half-cycles.

Page 8: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Average Value of Current or Voltage

In this instance, the average value is when a series of readings are taken at different points on the half-cycle and then averaged.

Points at which readings would be taken.

In the above example, the values are taken every 10 degrees. You could also take the values every 1 degree or even 30 degrees.

Page 9: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

The average value is found from this formula;

Value (VAV) = V1 + V2 + V3 + V4 +…………Vn

Average Values

It does not matter what the size of the current or voltage is, the average

value is always 0.637 times the maximum value available.

n

Page 10: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Average formulaNow try and find the average of the previous example

Average value (VAV) = V1 + V2 + V3 + V4 + V5 + V6

6

373.2 divide by 6 = 62.2v. This is the average (Vav) of 100v max (Vmax)

Page 11: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Average ValuesIn D.C circuits, the powered delivered to a resistor is given by the product of voltage across the element and the current through the element.

However, this is only true of instantaneous power to

a resistor in an A.C circuit.

An easy way to measure power is the RMS method.

Page 12: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

R.M.SR.M.S stands for, root mean square. This is

the effective value of a waveform.

The ‘Root Mean Square’ of an alternating current is the value of equivalent direct current that would produce the same amount of heat in a fixed resistive load.

Page 13: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

R.M.SIn the U.K, the single phase voltage is 230v. This is the RMS

voltage.

Multifunction meters (mft) measure RMS values.

Page 14: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

R.M.S values

The RMS value is found using this

formula;

Mathematically the RMS voltage (VRMS) of a sinusoidal waveform is determined by multiplying the peak voltage(Vmax) value by 0.7071

Page 15: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

R.M.S tableAngle* Voltage (V) Voltage (V2)

0 degrees 0

30 degrees 50.00

60 degrees 86.60

90 degrees 100

120 degrees 86.60

150 degrees 50.00

180 degrees 0

0

2500

7499.56

10000

7499.56

2500

0

Using a table will help you simplify the RMS formula

For this example the total squared figure is 29999.12

Page 16: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

R.M.S formulaSo now we have the squared total the formula

Becomes a little easier to work out.

VRMS = 29999.12

6= 4999.85 = 70.71v

Page 17: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

So when we say the main supply to a domestic property is 230V RMS, the maximum value would be 325.3V and the average value would be 207.2V.

Page 18: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Remember

In an A.C circuit the average value is 63.7% of the max value

In an A.C circuit the RMS value is 70.71% of the max value

Page 19: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Re-cap

AC voltage is produced when a coil rotates through a magnetic field.

Frequency is the number of cycles that occur every second

The maximum value of a waveform is Vpeak or Vmax

The average value of a waveform = 0.637

The RMS value of a waveform = 0.7071

The A.C RMS value is the same as the D.C value

Page 20: Electrical principles. Session 1 a.c circuits Objectives: To know how alternating current is produced To understand what average and RMS values are, in.

Exercise

You now have 5 minutes to complete

the exercises I have given you.