Electricity: DC vs. AC Power Distribution

1
L 26 Electricity and Magnetism [4]
 
simple electrical circuits – direct current DC
Alternating current (AC) vs direct current
(DC)
electric power distribution
household electricity
household wiring
Protection circuits - GFIC’s
Electrocution hazards
the kilowatt-hour (what you pay for)
Your carbon footprint
2
A direct current (DC) circuit
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OHM’S LAW 
I(Amps)= V(volts)/R(Ohms)
V
3
Direct Current DC
 
a circuit containing a battery is a DC circuit
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OR
4
Alternating Current (AC)
In an AC circuit the
current 
reverses
direction
 periodically
AC is what you get
from the power
company
Tesla and Edison
fought over the use
of AC vs. DC for
NYC.  Tesla won,
and AC was in!
5
How does the line voltage
 change in time?
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or a frequency of 60 Hz
6
AC power
 
The line voltage reverses polarity 60 times
a second or 60 Hertz (in Europe 50 Hz)
the current through the bulb reverses
direction 60 times a second also
for heaters, hair dryers, irons, toasters,
waffle makers, the fact that the current
reverses makes no difference
battery chargers (e.g., for cell phones)
convert the AC to DC
7
Why do we use AC ?
(DC seems simpler )
 
AC power is easier to generate
The only source of DC is batteries
late 1800’s 
 the war of the currents
Edison (DC) vs Tesla (Westinghouse) (AC)
Edison opened the first commercial power
plane for producing DC in NY in 1892
Tesla who was hired by George
Westinghouse who believed that AC
was superior
Tesla was right, but Edison never gave up!
8
Advantages of AC over DC
 
DC power is provided at one voltage only
AC power can be stepped up or down to
provide any voltage required
DC is very expensive to transmit over
large distances compared to AC, so many
plants are required
DC power plants must be close to users
AC plants can be far outside cities
by 1895 DC was out and AC was in
9
The electric generator
 
when a coil of wire is rotated
inside a magnet, AC electricity
is produced
the voltage depends on
how much wire the coil has
and how fast it is rotated.
devices called 
transformers
 can
make the voltage higher or lower
transformers only work with AC
Energy is required to rotate the coil 
 steam from
fossil fuel or nuclear power, hydroelectric power,
or wind turning a wind turbine
Coal fired power plant
 
10
Hydroelectric power
11
 
12
Hydroelectric power: Hoover Dam
13
Wind Power
 
Large wind turbine has diameter of about  100 m
Generates several megawatts of power (UI has
25 MW)
Investment 1M$/MW, but the wind is free!
Disadvantages:
Require frequent and costly maintenance
between 100,000 and 200,000 birds killed each year in
collisions with wind turbines
Nuclear power plant
 
14
15
Transformers
 
This is a typical step-down
transformers used to bring
the line voltage down from
5000 V to 240 V before it
gets to your home
In your home two voltages
are available:  240 V &120 V.
The 240 is used for the high
power appliances like the
clothes dryer, oven, etc. The
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16
 
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ELECTROCUTION
 
Human lethality
is most common
with alternating
current at
100–250 volts.
 
17
18
Electric outlets
 
The current is supposed to flow from the hot side
(black wire) to the neutral (white wire), if too
much current flows the fuse blows or the circuit
breaker trips.
the ground (green wire) is there for protection;
 to
provide a safe path for current in the event of a
short circuit
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19
Electric power generation and distribution
 
 electrical power 
P = I V
,
 energy per unit time
   Joules/s  =  
WATTS (watts = amps x volts)
 It is more efficient to transmit electrical
  power at 
high voltage and low current
.
 The losses along the transmission lines are
  reduced compared to transmission at low V.
 
20
House wiring
 
all circuits are
connected in parallel
21
electrical power
 
the power is how much electrical energy is
used per second = 1 Watt.
1 Watt = 1 Joule / 1 second
Power (Watts) = current (A) 
 voltage (V)
some appliances require high power, like
your electric range or clothes dryer, they
operate at the higher voltage (240 V), so
less current is used.
we pay for the total energy (not power)
used each month  - KW-hours (KWH)
22
Paying for electricity (KWH)
 
You pay for the total amount of electrical
energy
 that is used
the energy is measured in 
kilowatt-hours
the kilowatt (kW) = 1000 W, is the energy
used per unit time
When kW are multiplied by a time unit
(hours) we get total energy in KWH
The cost varies from about 6
¢/KWH in
South Dakota to 17¢/KWH in Hawaii; the
average is about 10¢/KWH
23
example
 
At a rate of 
10 cents per kWh
, how much
does it cost to keep a 100 W light bulb on for
one day (24 hours)
Solution
100 W = 0.1 kW
# KWH = 0.1 kW x 24 hr = 2.4 kWh
cost
 = 2.4 kWh x 
$0.10/kWh
              =  $0.24 = 24
¢
for one month the cost is $7.20
24
Your carbon footprint
 
1 ton (2000 lbs) of coal produces about 6000 KWH of
electric power
a 100 W light on 200 hours uses 1 lb of coal
an average US household uses about 10,000 KWH of
electricity per year
Each household consumes about 1.7 tons of coal each
year for its electricity usage
US coal reserves estimate: 300 billion tons!
US is now #1 natural gas producer in world.
Energy density
 (energy/volume) is an important issue
in choosing energy sources, e.g., 1 kg of nuclear fuel
has the same energy content of 1 million kg of coal
.
Many US power plants switching to natural gas, which
produces far less pollution and less than half of the
CO
2
 compared to coal.
25
Incandescent 
vs.
 Fluorescent ?
 
Incandescent lights must produce heat to
make light: they are inefficient
Fluorescent lights (gas discharges)
produce the same amount of light using
less electricity
Fluorescent lights can take several seconds
to come to full brightness
 because they
contain a small amount of mercury
(
environmental issue
) which must first
heat up for the light to work well
Fluorescent lights do not work well as
outdoor lights in the coldest climates
Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs)
 
LED lighting is now
replacing compact
fluorescents (CFL)
Certain semi-
conductors emit visible
light when a voltage is
applied to them
Nobel prize in physics
recently given to
inventors of white LEDs
 
26
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Explore the differences between direct current (DC) and alternating current (AC) in electrical circuits, power distribution, and household wiring. Learn about protection circuits, electrocution hazards, and the kilowatt-hour measurement. Discover why AC power is preferred over DC and how electricity generation has evolved over time.

  • Electricity
  • DC
  • AC
  • Power Distribution
  • Electrical Circuits

Uploaded on Nov 19, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. L 26 Electricity and Magnetism [4] simple electrical circuits direct current DC Alternating current (AC) vs direct current (DC) electric power distribution household electricity household wiring Protection circuits - GFIC s Electrocution hazards the kilowatt-hour (what you pay for) Your carbon footprint 1

  2. A direct current (DC) circuit DC: current always flows in the same direction Batteries provide direct currents. Current flows in direction that + charges would move Resistor R I I Duracell + V OHM S LAW I(Amps)= V(volts)/R(Ohms) 2

  3. Direct Current DC a circuit containing a battery is a DC circuit in a DC circuit the current always flows in the same direction OR Duracell Duracell + + 3

  4. Alternating Current (AC) In an AC circuit the current reverses direction periodically AC is what you get from the power company Tesla and Edison fought over the use of AC vs. DC for NYC. Tesla won, and AC was in! 4

  5. How does the line voltage change in time? 1 60s or a frequency of 60 Hz 200 150 peak 100 rms 50 0 -50 -100 -150 -200 0 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.1 time (seconds) 5

  6. AC power The line voltage reverses polarity 60 times a second or 60 Hertz (in Europe 50 Hz) the current through the bulb reverses direction 60 times a second also for heaters, hair dryers, irons, toasters, waffle makers, the fact that the current reverses makes no difference battery chargers (e.g., for cell phones) convert the AC to DC 6

  7. Why do we use AC ? (DC seems simpler ) AC power is easier to generate The only source of DC is batteries late 1800 s the war of the currents Edison (DC) vs Tesla (Westinghouse) (AC) Edison opened the first commercial power plane for producing DC in NY in 1892 Tesla who was hired by George Westinghouse who believed that AC was superior Tesla was right, but Edison never gave up! 7

  8. Advantages of AC over DC DC power is provided at one voltage only AC power can be stepped up or down to provide any voltage required DC is very expensive to transmit over large distances compared to AC, so many plants are required DC power plants must be close to users AC plants can be far outside cities by 1895 DC was out and AC was in 8

  9. The electric generator when a coil of wire is rotated inside a magnet, AC electricity is produced the voltage depends on how much wire the coil has and how fast it is rotated. devices called transformers can make the voltage higher or lower transformers only work with AC Energy is required to rotate the coil steam from fossil fuel or nuclear power, hydroelectric power, or wind turning a wind turbine 9

  10. Coal fired power plant 10

  11. Hydroelectric power 11

  12. Hydroelectric power: Hoover Dam 12

  13. Wind Power Large wind turbine has diameter of about 100 m Generates several megawatts of power (UI has 25 MW) Investment 1M$/MW, but the wind is free! Disadvantages: Require frequent and costly maintenance between 100,000 and 200,000 birds killed each year in collisions with wind turbines 13

  14. Nuclear power plant 14

  15. Transformers This is a typical step-down transformers used to bring the line voltage down from 5000 V to 240 V before it gets to your home In your home two voltages are available: 240 V &120 V. The 240 is used for the high power appliances like the clothes dryer, oven, etc. The 120 V is for everything else. Transformersonly work with AC. 15

  16. Bodily Effects of Electrical Currents 60 Hz AC, 1 mA = 0.001 A MEN WOMEN EFFECT 0.4 mA 0.3 mA Slight sensation experienced 1.1 mA 0.7 mA Threshold of perception 9 mA 6 mA Painful, but voluntary muscle control maintained Painful, unable to let go 16 mA 10.5 mA 23 mA 15 mA Severe pain, difficulty breathing 100 mA 100 mA Possible heart fibrillation after 3 seconds death 16

  17. ELECTROCUTION Human lethality is most common with alternating current at 100 250 volts. 17

  18. Electric outlets The current is supposed to flow from the hot side (black wire) to the neutral (white wire), if too much current flows the fuse blows or the circuit breaker trips. the ground (green wire) is there for protection; to provide a safe path for current in the event of a short circuit on some circuits (kitchens and bathrooms) there is additional protection GFCI ground fault circuit interrupter. If current accidentally flows through anything other than the hot or neutral it interrupts the circuit very quickly (in about 25 milliseconds, before fibrillation can occur) 18

  19. Electric power generation and distribution electrical power P = I V, energy per unit time Joules/s = WATTS (watts = amps x volts) It is more efficient to transmit electrical power at high voltage and low current. The losses along the transmission lines are reduced compared to transmission at low V. 19

  20. House wiring all circuits are connected in parallel 20

  21. electrical power the power is how much electrical energy is used per second = 1 Watt. 1 Watt = 1 Joule / 1 second Power (Watts) = current (A) voltage (V) some appliances require high power, like your electric range or clothes dryer, they operate at the higher voltage (240 V), so less current is used. we pay for the total energy (not power) used each month - KW-hours (KWH) 21

  22. Paying for electricity (KWH) You pay for the total amount of electrical energy that is used the energy is measured in kilowatt-hours the kilowatt (kW) = 1000 W, is the energy used per unit time When kW are multiplied by a time unit (hours) we get total energy in KWH The cost varies from about 6 /KWH in South Dakota to 17 /KWH in Hawaii; the average is about 10 /KWH 22

  23. example At a rate of 10 cents per kWh, how much does it cost to keep a 100 W light bulb on for one day (24 hours) Solution 100 W = 0.1 kW # KWH = 0.1 kW x 24 hr = 2.4 kWh cost = 2.4 kWh x $0.10/kWh = $0.24 = 24 for one month the cost is $7.20 23

  24. Your carbon footprint 1 ton (2000 lbs) of coal produces about 6000 KWH of electric power a 100 W light on 200 hours uses 1 lb of coal an average US household uses about 10,000 KWH of electricity per year Each household consumes about 1.7 tons of coal each year for its electricity usage US coal reserves estimate: 300 billion tons! US is now #1 natural gas producer in world. Energy density (energy/volume) is an important issue in choosing energy sources, e.g., 1 kg of nuclear fuel has the same energy content of 1 million kg of coal. Many US power plants switching to natural gas, which produces far less pollution and less than half of the CO2 compared to coal. 24

  25. Incandescent vs. Fluorescent ? Incandescent lights must produce heat to make light: they are inefficient Fluorescent lights (gas discharges) produce the same amount of light using less electricity Fluorescent lights can take several seconds to come to full brightness because they contain a small amount of mercury (environmental issue) which must first heat up for the light to work well Fluorescent lights do not work well as outdoor lights in the coldest climates 25

  26. Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) LED lighting is now replacing compact fluorescents (CFL) Certain semi- conductors emit visible light when a voltage is applied to them Nobel prize in physics recently given to inventors of white LEDs 26

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