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Practical No 7

The document discusses the charging and discharging of an inductor in an RL series circuit. It explains that when the switch closes, the inductor will oppose the change in current and it will gradually increase until it reaches its final value according to exponential equations. When the switch opens to disconnect the inductor from the voltage source, the inductor will discharge its stored energy to the resistor, with the current gradually decreasing to zero. The process of an inductor charging and discharging when connected to an AC power supply is also briefly described.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views3 pages

Practical No 7

The document discusses the charging and discharging of an inductor in an RL series circuit. It explains that when the switch closes, the inductor will oppose the change in current and it will gradually increase until it reaches its final value according to exponential equations. When the switch opens to disconnect the inductor from the voltage source, the inductor will discharge its stored energy to the resistor, with the current gradually decreasing to zero. The process of an inductor charging and discharging when connected to an AC power supply is also briefly described.

Uploaded by

Solanki Mihir
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BVM Engineering College (an autonomous Institution)

Electrical Engineering Department


4EE56 : Electrical Transient and Switchgear
Practical no: date:

Aim: simulation of RL series circuit charging discharging in PSPICE

Theory:
Inductor Charging and Discharging in RL series Circuit Analysis
Equations
Practically, the inductor has some resistive factor which is very small and is
ignored. It is represented by a series resistor and inductor and referred to as RL
Circuit analysis. Suppose the following RL circuit where a toggle switch can
connect and disconnect to the circuit source. The voltage across gradually
changes by exponential equations while inductor charging and discharging.

Inductor charging phase:


Suppose the inductor has no energy stored initially. At some point in time, the
switch is moved to position 1, the moment is called time t=0. As the switch closes
the source voltage will appear across the inductor and will try to pass current
(I=V/R) abruptly through the inductor. But according to the Lenz Law, the
inductor will oppose the change in current. The current will gradually increase
unless it reaches its final value of current (I=V/R). At the same time, the voltage
across the inductor will decrease unless it reaches zero.
It’s worth mentioning that the current reaches its final value at 5τ as well as
voltage reach at that time to zero.

𝐸 −𝑡
𝐼= (1 − 𝑒 𝜏 )
𝑅
𝐿
where 𝜏=
𝑅

𝑑𝑖 −𝑡
𝑣=𝐿 = 𝐸(𝑒 𝜏 )
𝑑𝑡

Inductor discharging phase in RL circuit


Suppose the above inductor is charged (has stored energy in the magnetic field
around it) and has been disconnected from the voltage source. Now connected to
the resistive load i.e. the switch is moved to position 2 at the time t=0. The energy
stored will be discharged to a resistive load and will be dissipated in the resistor.
The current will continue to flow in the same direction and will gradually
decrease to zero as well as the voltage across the inductor. But if the inductor is
disconnected and not connected to any load, so current will stop abruptly because
of no closed path. According to the equations above, it will cause a huge voltage
across the inductor and you will observe in the form of spark at switch terminals

How inductor charges and discharges through AC power supply?


Inductor charge for half-cycle up to the peak voltage. When the first cycle ends
the inductor start to discharge first. After the complete discharge, the inductor
starts to charge in opposite polarity. for the third half-cycle, similarly, the inductor
first discharges and then charges in voltage polarity. the process continues and
the inductor floats current back and forth rather than consuming the actual power.
Results:

Conclusion:

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