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On Mar 9, 10:35 am, Cecil Moore wrote:
Keith Dysart wrote: My issue was that you seemed, in that sentence, to be saying that the reflected energy was dissipated in the source resistor. But earlier you had stated that was not your claim. My earlier claim was that the average power in a reflected wave is dissipated in the source resistor when the forward wave is 90 degrees out of phase with the reflected wave at the source resistor. In that earlier claim, I didn't care to discuss instantaneous power and thus excluded instantaneous power from that claim. For instantaneous values, it will be helpful to change the example while leaving the conditions at the source resistor unchanged. Here's the earlier example: Rs Vg Vl +----/\/\/-----+----------------------+ | 50 ohm | | 1/8 WL | Vs 45 degrees 12.5 ohm 100v RMS 50 ohm line Load | | | | +--------------+----------------------+ gnd Here's the present example: Rs Vg Vl +----/\/\/-----+----------------------+ | 50 ohm | | 1 WL | Vs 360 degrees 23.5+j44.1 100v RMS 50 ohm line ohm Load | | | | +--------------+----------------------+ gnd If I haven't made some stupid mistake, the conditions at the source resistor are identical in both examples. No silly mistakes. This number is computed by the spreadsheet at http://keith.dysart.googlepages.com/...oad,reflection as 23.529411764706+44.1176470588235j, so you are pretty close. But in the second example, it is obvious that energy can be stored in the transmission line during part of a cycle (thus avoiding dissipation at that instant in time) and be delivered back to the source resistor during another part of the cycle (to be dissipated at a later instant in time). That is the nature of interference energy and is exactly equal to the difference between the two powers that you calculated. You neglected to take into account the ability of the network reactance to temporarily store energy and dissipate it later in time. I don't think I did. The power delivered by the generator to the line is Pg(t) = 32 + 68 cos(2wt) The average power delivered to the line is 32W while the peak power is 100W towards the load and 36W from the line to the generator. The exact same function describes the power delivered to the line for 12.5 ohm load 45 degree line example, and the 23.5+44.1j ohm load 360 degree line example. And if the load was connected directly to the generator, the same power would be delived directly to the load. In all cases the power dissipated in the source resistor is Prs(t) = 68 + 68 cos(2wt-61.92751306degrees) This power varies between 0.0W and 136W. This is true even when the load is connected directly to the generator without a line to created reflected power. The power provided by the source is Ps(t) = 100 + 116.6190379 cos(2wt-30.96375653degrees) = Prs(t) + Pg(t) so all of the energy delivered by source is nicely accounted for. All of the energy dissipated in the source resistor and delivered to the line originates in the voltage source. Looking at the line where it connects to the generator, we find that the forward power is Pf.g(t) = 50 + 50cos(2wt) and the reflected power is Pr.g(t) = -18 + 18cos(2wt) Pf.g(t) + Pr.g(t) = 32 + 68cos(2wt) = Pg(t) As expected, the sum of the forward and reflected power at the generator terminals is exactly the power delivered by the generator to the line. So you are correct, energy is stored in and returned from the line on each cycle, but this is the net energy, not the forward or reflected power since these are both computed into non-reactive impedances, their respective voltage and current are always in phase, so their powers always flow in only one direction. All of the reflected energy is dissipated in the source resistor, just not at the time you thought it should be. So as yet, there is no mechanism to explain storage of reflected power so it can be dissipated at a different time in the source resistor. I stand by my contention that the reflected power is not being dissipated in the source resistor because the dissipation does not occur at the correct time. You could convince me to change my contention by locating the entity that is storing the energy, and showing some analysis that explains why the amount of the energy time shift is a function of the magnitude of the reflected power. ....Keith |
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