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Impedances in a circuit can be drawn either like boxes or like a jagged wire (like resistors in America and Japan).]] AC STEADY STATE In general, the solutions for the voltages and currents in a circuit containing resistors, capacitors and inductors (in short, all linear behaving components) are solutions to a linear Ordinary Differential Equation . It can be shown that if the voltage and/or current sources in the circuit are sinusoidal and of constant frequency, the solutions tend to a form referred to as AC steady state. Thus, all of the voltages and currents in the circuit are sinusoidal and have constant peak amplitude, frequency and phase. Let v(t) be a sinusoidal function of time with constant Amplitude Vp, constant frequency f, and constant phase φ. : ::where ''j'' represents the Imaginary Unit () and means the Real Part of the complex number ''z''. Now, let the complex number ''V'' be given by: : ''V'' is called the Phasor representation of ''v(t)''. ''V'' is a constant complex number. For a circuit in AC steady state, all of the voltages and currents in the circuit have phasor representations as long as all the sources are of the same frequency. That is, each voltage and current can be represented as a constant complex number. For DC Circuit Analysis , each voltage and current is represented by a constant Real Number . Thus, it is reasonable to suppose that the rules developed for DC circuit analysis can be used for AC circuit analysis by using complex numbers instead of real numbers. DEFINITION OF ELECTRICAL IMPEDANCE The impedance of a circuit element is defined as the ratio of the phasor voltage across the element to the phasor current through the element: : It should be noted that although Z is the ratio of two phasors, Z is not itself a phasor. That is, Z is not associated with some sinusoidal function of time. For DC circuits, the resistance is defined by Ohm's law to be the ratio of the DC voltage across the resistor to the DC current through the resistor: : where the and above are DC (constant real) values. Just as Ohm's law is generalized to AC circuits through the use of phasors, other results from DC circuit analysis such as Voltage Division , Current Division , Thevenin's Theorem , and Norton's Theorem generalize to AC circuits. The full electric impedance is equal to: : , :::where :::: is the real part of the Complex Electric Impedance , named the effective electric impedance, and :::: is the imaginary part of the complex electric impedance, named the reactive electric impedance. IMPEDANCE OF DIFFERENT DEVICES For a resistor: : For a capacitor: : For an inductor: : For derivations, see Impedance Of Different Devices (derivations) . REACTANCE ''See main article: Reactance The term reactance refers to the imaginary part of the impedance. Some examples: A resistor's impedance is '''R (its resistance)''' and its reactance is '''0'''. A capacitor's impedance is '''j (-1/ωC)''' and its reactance is '''-1/ωC'''. An inductor's impedance is '''j ω L''' and its reactance is '''ω L'''. It is important to note that the impedance of a capacitor or an inductor is a function of the frequency ''f'' and is an imaginary quantity - however is certainly a real physical phenomenon relating the shift in phases between the voltage and current phasors due to the existence of the capacitor or inductor. Earlier it was shown that the impedance of a resistor is constant and real, in other words a resistor does not cause a phase shift between voltage and current as do capacitors and inductors. When resistors, capacitors, and inductors are combined in an AC circuit, the impedances of the individual components can be combined in the same way that the resistances are combined in a DC circuit. The resulting equivalent impedance is in general, a complex quantity. That is, the equivalent impedance has a real part and an imaginary part. The real part is denoted with an R and the imaginary part is denoted with an X. Thus: : is termed the resistive part of the impedance while is termed the ''reactive'' part of the impedance. It is therefore common to refer to a capacitor or an inductor as a ''reactance'' or equivalently, a ''reactive'' component (circuit element). Additionally, the impedance for a capacitance is negative imaginary while the impedance for an inductor is positive imaginary. Thus, a ''capacitive reactance'' refers to a negative reactance while an ''inductive reactance'' refers to a positive reactance. A reactive component is distinguished by the fact that the sinusoidal voltage across the component is in quadrature with the sinusoidal current through the component. This implies that the component alternately absorbs energy from the circuit and then returns energy to the circuit. That is, unlike a resistance, a reactance does not dissipate power. It is instructive to determine the value of the capacitive reactance at the frequency extremes. As the frequency approaches zero, the capacitive reactance grows without bound so that a capacitor approaches an open circuit for very low frequency sinusoidal sources. As the frequency increases, the capacitive reactance approaches zero so that a capacitor approaches a short circuit for very high frequency sinusoidal sources. Conversely, the inductive reactance approaches zero as the frequency approaches zero so that an inductor approaches a short circuit for very low frequency sinusoidal sources. As the frequency increases, the inductive reactance increases so that an inductor approaches an open circuit for very high frequency sinusoidal sources. COMBINING IMPEDANCES Combining impedances in series, parallel, or in delta-wye configurations, is the same as for resistors. The difference is that combining impedances involves manipulation of complex numbers. In series Combining impedances in series is simple: : In parallel Combining impedances in parallel is much more difficult than combining simple properties like resistance or capacitance, due to a multiplication term. | ||
|   | :<math>Z | \leftZ e^ {j \phi} = Z
ight\angle \phi </math> |
|   | ::<math> Z | \sqrt{R^2+X^2} = \sqrt{Z Z^} </math> is the magnitude of ''Z'' (''Z denotes the Complex Conjugate of Z''), and |
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