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Phasor (electronics)

 

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Phasor (electronics)



 
 
In physics
Physics

Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
 and engineering
Engineering

Engineering is the discipline and profession of applying Technology and science knowledge and utilizing natural laws and physical resources in order to design and implement materials, structures, machines, devices, systems, and process that safely realize a desired objective and meet specified criteria....
, a phase vector ("phasor") is a representation of a sine wave
Sine wave

The sine wave or sinusoid is a function that occurs often in mathematics, physics, signal processing, hearing , electrical engineering, and many other fields....
 whose amplitude (A), phase (?), and frequency (?) are time-invariant. It is a subset of a more general concept called analytic representation
Analytic signal

In mathematics and signal processing, the analytic representation of a real-valued function or signal facilitates many mathematical manipulations of the signal....
. Phasors reduce the dependencies on these parameters to three independent factors, thereby simplifying certain kinds of calculations. In particular, the frequency factor, which also includes the time-dependence of the sine wave, is often common to all the components of a linear combination of sine waves.






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In physics
Physics

Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
 and engineering
Engineering

Engineering is the discipline and profession of applying Technology and science knowledge and utilizing natural laws and physical resources in order to design and implement materials, structures, machines, devices, systems, and process that safely realize a desired objective and meet specified criteria....
, a phase vector ("phasor") is a representation of a sine wave
Sine wave

The sine wave or sinusoid is a function that occurs often in mathematics, physics, signal processing, hearing , electrical engineering, and many other fields....
 whose amplitude (A), phase (?), and frequency (?) are time-invariant. It is a subset of a more general concept called analytic representation
Analytic signal

In mathematics and signal processing, the analytic representation of a real-valued function or signal facilitates many mathematical manipulations of the signal....
. Phasors reduce the dependencies on these parameters to three independent factors, thereby simplifying certain kinds of calculations. In particular, the frequency factor, which also includes the time-dependence of the sine wave, is often common to all the components of a linear combination of sine waves. Using phasors, it can be factored out, leaving just the static amplitude and phase information to be combined algebraically (rather than trigonometrically). Similarly, linear differential equations can be reduced to algebraic
Algebraic

Algebraic may refer to:* Algebraic chess notation — a method used to record and describe the play of chess games.* Algebraic data types....
 ones. The term phasor therefore often refers to just those two factors. In older texts, a phasor is also referred to as a sinor.

Definition


Euler's formula
Euler's formula

Euler's formula, named after Leonhard Euler, is a mathematics formula in complex analysis that shows a deep relationship between the trigonometric functions and the complex exponential function....
 indicates that sine waves can be represented mathematically as the sum of two complex-valued functions:

   

or as the real part
Real part

In mathematics, the real part of a complex number , is the first element of the ordered pair of real numbers representing , i.e. if , or equivalently, , then the real part of is ....
 of one of the functions:

As indicated above, phasor can refer to either   or just the complex constant,    . In the latter case, it is understood to be a shorthand notation, encoding the amplitude and phase of an underlying sinusoid.

An even more compact shorthand is angle notation
Angle notation

Angle notation or phasor notation is a notation used in electronics using the   sign. It is an abbreviation that arose due to the frequent occurrence of the expression e j ?....
:  

The sine wave can be understood as the projection on the real axis of a rotating vector on the complex plane. The modulus of this vector is the amplitude of the oscillations, while its argument is the total phase . The phase constant represents the angle that the complex vector forms with the real axis at .

Phasor arithmetic


Multiplication by a constant (scalar)


Multiplication of the phasor   by a complex constant,    produces another phasor. That means its only effect is to change the amplitude and phase of the underlying sinusoid:

In electronics,   would represent an impedance
Impedance

Impedance may refer to:*the ratio of the voltage phasor to the electric current phasor, as in**Electrical impedance, a measure of opposition to time-varying electric current in an electric circuit....
, which is independent of time. Multiplying a phasor current by an impedance produces a phasor voltage. Note that if   represents another phasor (in shorthand notation), the notation hides the time dependence. But the product of two phasors (or squaring a phasor) would represent the product of two sine waves, which is a non-linear operation and does not produce another phasor.

Differentiation and integration


The time derivative or integral of a phasor produces another phasor. For example:

Therefore, in phasor representation, the time derivative of a sinusoid becomes just multiplication by the constant,   Similarly, integrating a phasor corresponds to multiplication by   The time-dependent factor,  ,  is unaffected. When we solve a linear differential equation
Linear differential equation

In mathematics, a linear differential equation is a differential equation of the formwhere the differential operator L is a linear operator, y is the unknown function, and the right hand side ƒ is a given function ....
 with phasor arithmetic, we are merely factoring    out of all terms of the equation, and reinserting it into the answer. For example, consider the following differential equation for the voltage across the capacitor in an RC circuit
RC circuit

A 'resistor?capacitor circuit' , or 'RC filter' or 'RC network', is an electric circuit composed of resistors and capacitors driven by a voltage source or current source....
:

When the voltage source in this circuit is sinusoidal:

we may substitute:

where phasor    and phasor is the unknown quantity to be determined.

In the phasor shorthand notation, the differential equation reduces to:

Solving for the phasor capacitor voltage gives:

As we have see, the complex constant factor represents differences of the amplitude and phase of   relative to   and

In polar coordinate form, the factor is:

    where  

Therefore:

Addition

The sum of multiple phasors produces another phasor. That is because the sum of sine waves with the same frequency is also a sine wave with that frequency:

where:

A key point is that A3 and ?3 do not depend on ? or t, which is what makes phasor notation possible. The time and frequency dependence can be suppressed and re-inserted into the outcome as long as the only operations used in between are ones that produce another phasor. In angle notation
Angle notation

Angle notation or phasor notation is a notation used in electronics using the   sign. It is an abbreviation that arose due to the frequent occurrence of the expression e j ?....
, the operation shown above is written:

Another way to view addition is that two vectors with coordinates and are added vectorially to produce a resultant vector with coordinates . (see animation)

In physics, this sort of addition occurs when sine waves "interfere
Interference

In physics, interference is the addition of two or more waves that result in a new wave pattern.Interference usually refers to the interaction of waves which are correlated or Coherence with each other, either because they come from the same source or because they have the same or nearly the same frequency....
" with each other, constructively or destructively. The static vector concept provides useful insight into questions like this: "What phase difference would be required between three identical waves for perfect cancellation?" In this case, simply imagine taking three vectors of equal length and placing them head to tail such that the last head matches up with the first tail. Clearly, the shape which satisfies these conditions is an equilateral triangle
Triangle

A triangle is one of the basic shapes of geometry: a polygon with three corners or wikt:vertex and three sides or edges which are line segments....
, so the angle between each phasor to the next is 120° (2p/3 radians), or one third of a wavelength /3. So the phase difference between each wave must also be 120°, as is the case in three-phase power

In other words, what this shows is:

In the example of three waves, the phase difference between the first and the last wave was 240 degrees, while for two waves destructive interference happens at 180 degrees. In the limit of many waves, the phasors must form a circle for destructive interference, so that the first phasor is nearly parallel with the last. This means that for many sources, destructive interference happens when the first and last wave differ by 360 degrees, a full wavelength . This is why in single slit diffraction
Diffraction

Diffraction is normally taken to refer to various phenomena which occur when a wave encounters an obstacle. It is described as the apparent bending of waves around small obstacles and the spreading out of waves past small openings....
, the minima occurs when light
Light

Light, or visible light, is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength that is Visible spectrum to the human eye , or up to 380?750 nm. In the broader field of physics, light is sometimes used to refer to electromagnetic radiation of all wavelengths, whether visible or not....
 from the far edge travels a full wavelength further than the light from the near edge.

Phasor diagrams


Electrical engineers, electronics engineers, electronic engineering technicians and aircraft engineers all use phasor diagrams to visualize complex constants and variables (phasors). Like vectors, arrows drawn on graph paper or computer displays represent phasors. Cartesian and polar representations each have advantages.

Circuit laws


With phasors, the techniques for solving DC
Direct current

Direct current is the unidirectional flow of electric charge. Direct current is produced by such sources as battery , thermocouples, solar cells, and commutator-type electric machines of the dynamo type....
 circuits can be applied to solve AC circuits. A list of the basic laws is given below.

  • Ohm's law for resistors: a resistor has no time delays and therefore doesn't change the phase of a signal therefore V=IR remains valid.
  • Ohm's law for resistors, inductors, and capacitors: V=IZ where Z is the complex impedance
    Electrical impedance

    Electrical impedance, or simply impedance, describes a measure of opposition to a sinusoidal alternating current . Electrical impedance extends the concept of Electrical resistance to AC circuits, describing not only the relative amplitudes of the voltage and Electric current, but also the relative Phase ....
    .
  • In an AC circuit we have real power (P) which is a representation of the average power into the circuit and reactive power (Q) which indicates power flowing back and forward. We can also define the complex power S=P+iQ and the apparent power which is the magnitude of S. The power law for an AC circuit expressed in phasors is then S=VI* (where I* is the complex conjugate
    Complex conjugate

    In mathematics, the complex conjugate of a complex number is given by changing the sign of the imaginary part. Thus, the conjugate of the complex number...
     of I).
  • Kirchhoff's circuit laws
    Kirchhoff's circuit laws

    Kirchhoff's circuit laws are two Equality that deal with the Charge conservation and energy in electrical circuits, and were first described in 1845 by Gustav Kirchhoff....
     work with phasors in complex form


Given this we can apply the techniques of analysis of resistive circuits
Analysis of resistive circuits

A network, in the context of electronics, is a collection of interconnected components. Network analysis is the process of finding the voltages across, and the currents through, every component in the network....
 with phasors to analyze single frequency AC circuits containing resistors, capacitors, and inductors. Multiple frequency linear AC circuits and AC circuits with different waveforms can be analyzed to find voltages and currents by transforming all waveforms to sine wave components with magnitude and phase then analyzing each frequency separately, as allowed by the superposition theorem
Superposition theorem

The superposition theorem for Electrical network states that the total Electric current in any branch of a bilateral linear circuit equals the algebraic sum of the currents produced by each source acting separately throughout the circuit....
.

Power engineering

In analysis of three phase AC power systems, usually a set of phasors is defined as the three complex cube roots of unity, graphically represented as unit magnitudes at angles of 0, 120 and 240 degrees. By treating polyphase AC circuit quantities as phasors, balanced circuits can be simplified and unbalanced circuits can be treated as an algebraic combination of symmetrical circuits. This approach greatly simplifies the work required in electrical calculations of voltage drop, power flow, and short-circuit currents. In the context of power systems analysis, the phase angle is often given in degree
Degree (angle)

A degree , usually denoted by ? , is a measurement of plane angle, representing 1/360 of a Turn ; one degree is equivalent to p/180 radians....
s, and the magnitude in rms
Root mean square

In mathematics, the root mean square , also known as the quadratic mean, is a statistics measure of the magnitude of a varying quantity. It is especially useful when variates are positive and negative, e.g., sinusoids....
 value rather than the peak amplitude of the sinusoid.

The technique of synchrophasor
Synchrophasor

A Phasor measurement unit measures the electrical Waveform on an Grid to determine the health of the system. In power engineering, these are also commonly referred to as synchrophasors and are considered one of the most important measuring devices in the future of power systems....
s uses digital instruments to measure the phasors representing transmission system voltages at widespread points in a transmission network. Small changes in the phasors are sensitive indicators of power flow and system stability.

Footnotes


External links