Suggestions to the previous posting marked ///\\jbartos wrote:
Where the meter without adjustment to rms would be indicating Iav, therefore, there would be smaller amount of heat calculated or measured over voltage and current.
Exactly the point. The meter without adjustment would indicate a value that would calculate the wrong amount of heat.
///Finally, got it.\\jbartos writes a lot about rectified sinewaves. The rms value of a full-wave rectified sinewave is the same as the rms value of unrectified ac.
///Exactly true, never denied.\\ Since power equals I²•R, to get the average power, you have to average I², not I.
///Yes, you can average I^2, however, the result is Irms^2 as I showed in my previous posting, not Iav^2. Therefore, there is a DC average and AC average (often expressed in in rms values. See the reference below.\\ The average of unrectified sinusoidal current squared equals the average of full-wave rectified current squared. This comes from the well-known fact that
(+N)² = (-N)² = |N|² where N is any number.
///True, never denied. However, the average of the |Imax x sinwt| is Iav=0.64 x Imax, which is different from Irms=0.707 x Imax
There have been several postings on this issue within past four years in this Forum.
The following reference is available:
Ned Mohan, Tore M. Undeland, William P. Robbins, “Power Electronics, Converters, Applications, and Design,” Third Edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2003.
Page 14 Section 1-7
The uppercase symbols V and I refer to their values computed from their instantaneous waveforms. They generally refer to an average value in dc quantities and root-mean-square (rms) value in ac quantities.
Page 382 Section 13-5-1 Form Factor = Ia(rms)/Ia(average)..Equation (13-15)
The form factor will be unity only if Ia is a pure dc. The more Ia deviates from a pure dc, the higher will be the value of the form factor. The power input to the motor (and hence the power output) varies proportionally with the average value of Ia whereas the losses in the resistance of the armature winding depend on Ia(rms)^2. Therefore, the higher the form factor of the armature current, the higher the losses in the motor (i.e. higher heating) and, hence, the lower the motor efficiency.
The above paragraph implies that the dc value derived from sinusoidal waveform will produce less heat. This means that the dc value has to be adjusted to match the ac rms value to produce the same value of heat. Therefore, the rms value is somewhat inflated value in comparison with the dc value. I.e. the Utility is selling 19% more energy over the rms than it would be sold over the dc values.
Please, would you kindly support your statements with references, e.g. textbooks, papers, websites, handbooks, etc. to add more credibility to your statements.\\
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