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1 Chapter 4 “Electrical Principles ” Bill Ryan, KJ6IGX and Glen Rikerd, NO6W Discussion Leader
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Chapter 4 Radio Mathematics 2
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A General Principle Each question should be approximately as difficult as the other questions.
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General Principles Question statements that involve more difficult subjects generally can be expected to have easier answers.
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Look for Simplicity Calculations are set up to use simple numbers or combinations of values Estimate the answers
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Central Ideas Resonance Triangles Ratio Handling Exponents
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Resonance Capacitive Reactance and Inductive Reactance cancel each other
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Triangles The test uses simple triangles that can be solved by sight
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Ratio The ratio of a triangles sides often tells you how to find the answer
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Handling Exponents When multiplying, add the exponents When dividing, change the sign and then add the exponents For square roots, cut the exponent in half
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Question E5C11 Impedance has a real part (resistance) and an imaginary part (reactance) The horizontal axis is the real part The vertical axis is the imaginary part
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Polar Coordinates Polar Coordinate System has same information as the rectangular axis Determined by a distance from a fixed point and an angle with a fixed direction
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Phase Angle
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Question E5B06: Time Constant Time it takes for a capacitor to charge or discharge by 63.2% is called the time constant
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Question E5B06: Time Constant Tau = Resistance x Capacitance
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Handling Exponents 1 megohm x 1 microfarad = 1 x 10 6 x 1 x 10 -6 = 10 6 + (-6) = 10 0 = 1 second
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E5B06: Time Constant Calculation Given 800 V DC charge decreases to 294 V DC. (Looks like – 63.2%) R x C = 1 megohm x 450 microfarads 1 x 10 6 x 450 x 10 -6 = 450 seconds
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Phase Relationship of current and voltage is the phase of the two waves Phase means time The effect that occurs first leads the second, the trailing effect lags the first
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Voltage jumps from coil to coil Since voltage does not travel along the whole wire, it moves faster than the current in an inductor Voltage leads current in an inductor
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Voltage must build up in a capacitor. This causes a delay. Current seems to go right through the capicator Current leads voltage in a capacitor
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When reactance is inductive, voltage leads current When reactance is capacitive, current leads voltage
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Question E5B10: Phase Relationship What is the Relationship between current through and voltage across an inductor Voltage moves from loop to loop, current must move through the wire In this question, voltage leads current by 90 degrees
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Understanding Right Triangles: The central angle is the phase angle Two sides are equal: opposite angles = 45 degrees Opposite side longer than adjacent: central angle is more than 45 degrees Opposite side shorter: central angle is less than 45 degrees
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Equal sides of triangle, phase angle = 45 When reactance and resistance are the same number of ohms, then the triangle has equal sides 100 ohms 45 100 ohms
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Reactance smaller, phase angle = <45 When reactance is smaller than the resistance, the phase is less than 45 250 ohms < -45 100 ohms Net Capacitative Reactance is a negative phase angle
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Reactance larger than resistance When reactance is larger than the resistance, the phase is more than 45 100 ohms - > -45 250 ohms XC
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Question E5B13 Resistance = 1000 ohm Reactance is inductive 250 ohms Phase angle is less than 45 degrees and voltage leads the current Inductive Reactance 250 ohms <45 Resistance 1000 ohms
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Question E5B07 Resistance = 1000 ohm Reactance is capacitive 250 ohms Phase angle is less than 45 degrees and current leads the voltage 1000 <-45 250 Capacitive reactance is always drawn downwards to show a negative angle
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Question E5B13 Complex Impedance Phase angle between voltage across and current through series RLC circuit XL =500 ohms, XC = 250 ohms R = 1000 ohms Net reactance: XL – XC = 250 ohms XL Phase angle is less than 45 degrees and voltage leads current
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Tank Circuits Parallel RLC circuits at resonance have a high impedance and appear as an open circuit. It also has a circulating current and builds a maximum voltage at resonance.
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3 4 5 Right Triangles Pythagorean Theorem for series RLC If shortest sides are 3 and 4 units long, then the longest side is 5 units Resistance = 400 ohms and Reactance = 300 ohms Impedance = 500 ohms
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Pythagorean Triangles Any combination of 300 and 400 for the sides will produce an impedance of 500 500 300 400
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30 60 90 Triangles When the phase angle is 30 degrees, the reactance is always half of the impedance 200 30 100 186
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Equilateral Triangles When the phase angle is 45 degrees, the impedance is 1.41 times either the reactance or resistance 141 100 45 100
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Question: E5D19 Power Factor Real Power = PF x Apparent Power Power Factor (PF) = 0.71 Apparent Power = 500 watts Watts consumed = 0.71 x 500 watts = 355 watts
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Resonant Frequency Same for Series and Parallel Circuits F r = 1 2 pi L x C
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Resonant Frequency Strategy Calculate L x C alone first Take square root Plug values into formula Estimate the result
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Question E5A14 Resonant Freq L x C = 40 microhenrys x 200 picofarads = 40 x 10 -6 x 200 x 10 -12 = 8,000 x 10 -12 Take square root of 8,000 x 10 -18 = Square root of 80 x 10 -16 = 9 x 10 -8
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Plug in values and estimate for F r F r = 1 = 10 +8 6 x 9 x 10 -8 50 F r =.02 x 10 +8 = 2 x 10 +6 = 2 MHz estimate
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Answer to Question E5A14 Estimate of F r = 2 MHZ Actual value of F r = 1.78 MHz Just estimate freely and pick the closest answer
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Q Q is a quality factor for a circuit for low resistive losses Q is the ratio of reactance to resistance Q = X R
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Resonant Circuit Bandwidth Bandwidth is the freqency range within 3 dB below peak response Delta f = bandwidth = f r Q
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Question E5A13 Half Power BW Half Power BW of a parallel resonant circuit: Resonant Frequency = 14.25 MHz Q = 187 BW = 14.25 MHz = 15 MHz = 100 kHz 187 150 Actual answer: 76.2 kHz
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Encouraging Thoughts We want you to pass the Extra Exam Try to focus on simplifying methods True mastery of this material will take a long time Commit to taking the test at end of class despite whether feeling ready
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In Class Practice PRoblems Here is a list of possible in class seminar questions
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Chapter 4 E5C11 What do the two numbers represent that are used to define a point on a graph using rectangular coordinates? The sine and cosine values The tangent and cotangent values The coordinate values along the horizontal and vertical axes The magnitude and phase of the point 46
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Chapter 4 E5D05 What is a magnetic field? The space between the plates of a charged capacitor, through which a magnetic force acts The force that drives current through a resistor The region surrounding a magnet through which a magnetic force acts Electric current through the space around a permanent magnet 47
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Chapter 4 E5B05 (A) How long does it take for an initial charge of 20 V DC to decrease to 7.36 V DC in a 0.01-microfarad capacitor when a 2-megohm resistor is connected across it? 0.02 seconds 0.04 seconds 20 seconds 40 seconds 48
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Chapter 4 E5D13 (B) How many watts are consumed in a circuit having a power factor of 0.2 if the input is 100-V AC at 4 amperes? 2000 watts 400 watts 80 watts 50 watts 49
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Chapter 4 E5C19 (B) Which point on Figure E5-2 best represents that impedance of a series circuit consisting of a 400 ohm resistor and a 38 picofarad capacitor at 14 MHz? Point 6 Point 5 Point 4 Point 2 50
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Chapter 4 Figure E5-2 refers to question E5C19 51
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Chapter 4 E5A12 What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant circuit that has a resonant frequency of 3.7 MHz and a Q of 118? 15.7 kHz 31.4 kHz 218.3 kHz 436.6 kHz 52
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Next Class Session Study Chapter 5 “Components and Building Blocks” Study the Chapter 5 Question Pool questions found in the Blue Boxes Prepare your Chapter 5 Study Guide materials 53
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Chapter 4 E5C11 What do the two numbers represent that are used to define a point on a graph using rectangular coordinates? The sine and cosine values The tangent and cotangent values The coordinate values along the horizontal and vertical axes The magnitude and phase of the point 54
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Chapter 4 E5D05 What is a magnetic field? The space between the plates of a charged capacitor, through which a magnetic force acts The force that drives current through a resistor The region surrounding a magnet through which a magnetic force acts Electric current through the space around a permanent magnet 55
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Chapter 4 E5B05 (A) How long does it take for an initial charge of 20 V DC to decrease to 7.36 V DC in a 0.01-microfarad capacitor when a 2-megohm resistor is connected across it? 0.02 seconds 0.04 seconds 20 seconds 40 seconds 56
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Chapter 4 E5D13 (B) How many watts are consumed in a circuit having a power factor of 0.2 if the input is 100-V AC at 4 amperes? 2000 watts 400 watts 80 watts 50 watts 57
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Chapter 4 E5C19 (B) Which point on Figure E5-2 best represents that impedance of a series circuit consisting of a 400 ohm resistor and a 38 picofarad capacitor at 14 MHz? Point 6 Point 5 Point 4 Point 2 58
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Chapter 4 Figure E5-2 refers to question E5C19 59
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Chapter 4 E5A12 (B) What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant circuit that has a resonant frequency of 3.7 MHz and a Q of 118? 15.7 kHz 31.4 kHz 218.3 kHz 436.6 kHz 60
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Next Class Session Study Chapter 5 “Components and Building Blocks” Study the Chapter 5 Question Pool questions found in the Blue Boxes Prepare your Chapter 5 Study Guide materials 61
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