PARTS AND MATERIALS
CROSS-REFERENCES
Lessons In Electric Circuits, Volume 2, chapter 1: “Basic AC Theory”
Lessons In Electric Circuits, Volume 2, chapter 4: “Reactance and Impedance—Capacitive”
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM
- Low-voltage AC power supply
- Two capacitors, 0.1 µF each, non-polarized (Radio Shack catalog # 272-135)
- Two 27 kΩ resistors
CROSS-REFERENCES
Lessons In Electric Circuits, Volume 2, chapter 1: “Basic AC Theory”
Lessons In Electric Circuits, Volume 2, chapter 4: “Reactance and Impedance—Capacitive”
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- How out-of-phase AC voltages do not add algebraically, but according to vector (phasor) arithmetic
SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM
ILLUSTRATION
INSTRUCTIONS
Build the circuit and measure voltage drops across each component with an AC voltmeter. Measure total (supply) voltage with the same voltmeter. You will discover that the voltage drops do not add up to equal the total voltage. This is due to phase shifts in the circuit: voltage dropped across the capacitors is out-of-phase with voltage dropped across the resistors, and thus the voltage drop figures do not add up as one might expect. Taking phase angle into consideration, they do add up to equal the total, but a voltmeter doesn’t provide phase angle measurements, only amplitude.
Try measuring voltage dropped across both resistors at once. This voltage drop will equal the sum of the voltage drops measured across each resistor separately. This tells you that both the resistors’ voltage drop waveforms are in-phase with each other, since they add simply and directly.
Measure voltage dropped across both capacitors at once. This voltage drop, like the drop measured across the two resistors, will equal the sum of the voltage drops measured across each capacitor separately. Likewise, this tells you that both the capacitors’ voltage drop waveforms are in-phase with each other.
Given that the power supply frequency is 60 Hz (household power frequency in the United States), calculate impedances for all components and determine all voltage drops using Ohm’s Law (E=IZ ; I=E/Z ; Z=E/I). The polar magnitudes of the results should closely agree with your voltmeter readings.
COMPUTER SIMULATION
Schematic with SPICE node numbers:
Build the circuit and measure voltage drops across each component with an AC voltmeter. Measure total (supply) voltage with the same voltmeter. You will discover that the voltage drops do not add up to equal the total voltage. This is due to phase shifts in the circuit: voltage dropped across the capacitors is out-of-phase with voltage dropped across the resistors, and thus the voltage drop figures do not add up as one might expect. Taking phase angle into consideration, they do add up to equal the total, but a voltmeter doesn’t provide phase angle measurements, only amplitude.
Try measuring voltage dropped across both resistors at once. This voltage drop will equal the sum of the voltage drops measured across each resistor separately. This tells you that both the resistors’ voltage drop waveforms are in-phase with each other, since they add simply and directly.
Measure voltage dropped across both capacitors at once. This voltage drop, like the drop measured across the two resistors, will equal the sum of the voltage drops measured across each capacitor separately. Likewise, this tells you that both the capacitors’ voltage drop waveforms are in-phase with each other.
Given that the power supply frequency is 60 Hz (household power frequency in the United States), calculate impedances for all components and determine all voltage drops using Ohm’s Law (E=IZ ; I=E/Z ; Z=E/I). The polar magnitudes of the results should closely agree with your voltmeter readings.
COMPUTER SIMULATION
Schematic with SPICE node numbers:
The two large-value resistors Rbogus1 and Rbogus1 are connected across the capacitors to provide a DC path to ground in order that SPICE will work. This is a “fix” for one of SPICE’s quirks, to avoid it from seeing the capacitors as open circuits in its analysis. These two resistors are entirely unnecessary in the real circuit.
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