In this post AC means <Alternating Current> unless otherwise mentioned like AC Voltage, which is not <Alternating Current> Voltage but more like <Alternating Voltage>. Let's see the generally accepted idea of AC (Alternating Current).
Alternating current
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (13-Dec-2013)
Alternating Current (green curve). The horizontal axis measures time; the vertical, current or voltage.
In
alternating current (
AC, also
ac), the flow of
electric charge periodically reverses direction. In
direct current (
DC, also
dc), the flow of electric charge is only in one direction.
The abbreviations
AC and
DC are often used to mean simply
alternating and
direct, as when they modify
current or
voltage.
[1] [2]
AC is the form in which
electric power is delivered to businesses and residences. The usual
waveform of an
AC power circuit is a
sine wave. In certain applications, different waveforms are used, such as
triangular or
square waves.
Audio and
radio
signals carried on electrical wires are also examples of alternating
current. In these applications, an important goal is often the recovery
of information encoded (or
modulated) onto the AC signal.
---- end of quote of this part
If you think for a while about the above explanation on Alternating Current, some simple questions arise.
Question - 1)
"In
alternating current (
AC, also
ac), the flow of
electric charge periodically reverses direction."
The direction of AC reverses, which meas the direction changes periodically (back and forth) and usually in very precisely in terms of time - sine wave.
"AC is the form in which
electric power is delivered to businesses and residences."
If this be true how
electric power is delivered to businesses and residences (seems to one direction, from a power station to businesses and residences) despite AC changes the direction periodically (back and forth).
Question - 2)
"Audio and
radio
signals carried on electrical wires are also examples of alternating
current."
If this be true how
Audio and
radio
signals are carried on electrical wires (seems to one direction, from a radio antenna through electrical wires to a loudspeaker or ear phone) despite AC changes the direction periodically.
We have some answers to Question -2)
Radio signals (in Electromagnetic Wave form) in space travel far to every direction (all directions), not change direction periodically. You can find more detailed explanations easily but usually with many math equations, which seem very convincing due to the massive math.
But how about
Audio and
radio
signals on electrical wires after coming into through an antenna? By using DC bias the direction of signals changes from AC (changing direction periodically back and force) to pulsating DC (not changing direction periodically but changing the magnitude periodically). (see the chart at the top)
<wave> may be a hint when considering the direction of AC (Alternating Current)t.
Additional Question - Direction of time.
I have found few people mentioning this but the direction of the arrow of the horizontal lime indicates that the direction of time is forward not backward. This contradicts the concept of time in our daily life, which is backward. Time is passing through us - from front to back.
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Transmission, distribution, and domestic power supply
Wik on AC (13-Dec-2013) continued
AC voltage may be increased or decreased with a
transformer. Use of a higher
voltage
leads to significantly more efficient transmission of power. The power
losses in a conductor are a product of the square of the current and the
resistance of the conductor, described by the formula
This means that when transmitting a fixed power on a given wire, if
the current is doubled, the power loss will be four times greater.
The power transmitted is equal to the product of the current and the voltage (assuming no phase difference); that is,
Thus, the same amount of power can be transmitted with a lower
current by increasing the voltage. It is therefore advantageous when
transmitting large amounts of power to distribute the power with high
voltages (often hundreds of kilovolts).
----- end of quote of this part
Like other explanation on AC (Alternating Current), the story changes to AC Power with the equations and explanation like above The explanations usually do not mention the direction of AC (Alternating Current). Electrical Power (as well as Electrical Energy) is not a vector quantity but scalar quantity so does not have direction.
Transmission means the electrical power is transmitted from one place (power station) to another (to businesses and residences)so it must have one direction.
Effects at high frequencies
Wik on AC (13-Dec-2013) continued
Main article: Skin effect
A direct current flows uniformly throughout the cross-section of a
uniform wire. An alternating current of any frequency is forced away
from the wire's center, toward its outer surface. This is because the
acceleration of an
electric charge in an alternating current produces
waves of
electromagnetic radiation that cancel the propagation of electricity toward the center of materials with high
conductivity. This phenomenon is called
skin effect.
At very high frequencies the current no longer flows
in the wire, but effectively flows
on the surface of the wire, within a thickness of a few
skin depths.
The skin depth is the thickness at which the current density is reduced
by 63%. Even at relatively low frequencies used for power transmission
(50–60 Hz), non-uniform distribution of current still occurs in
sufficiently thick
conductors.
For example, the skin depth of a copper conductor is approximately
8.57 mm at 60 Hz, so high current conductors are usually hollow to
reduce their mass and cost.
Since the current tends to flow in the periphery of conductors, the
effective cross-section of the conductor is reduced. This increases the
effective AC
resistance
of the conductor, since resistance is inversely proportional to the
cross-sectional area. The AC resistance often is many times higher than
the DC resistance, causing a much higher energy loss due to
ohmic heating (also called I
2R loss).
---- end of quote of this part
"A direct current flows uniformly throughout the cross-section of a
uniform wire." As a belief it is OK but some explanation with evidences are required.
"This is because the
acceleration of an
electric charge in an alternating current produces
waves of
electromagnetic radiation that cancel the propagation of electricity toward the center of materials with high
conductivity. This phenomenon is called
skin effect."
This explanation is too simple as no math equations but suggest some important things on our concern the direction of AC (Alternating Current).
The key ward may be again <waves>.
Techniques for reducing AC resistance
Wik on AC (13-Dec-2013) continued
For low to medium frequencies, conductors can be divided into
stranded wires, each insulated from one other, and the relative
positions of individual strands specially arranged within the conductor
bundle. Wire constructed using this technique is called Litz wire.
This measure helps to partially mitigate skin effect by forcing more
equal current throughout the total cross section of the stranded
conductors. Litz wire is used for making high-Q inductors,
reducing losses in flexible conductors carrying very high currents at
lower frequencies, and in the windings of devices carrying higher radio frequency current (up to hundreds of kilohertz), such as switch-mode power supplies and radio frequency transformers.
---- end of quote of this part
The last sentence (not main clause but subordinate clause) suggests rather implicitly and partly explicitly <wires carry radio frequency current (a kind of AC and current in electromagnetic wave form)> but does not mention the direction of the current but likely a kind of AC - the current changing the direction or magnitude periodically.
Techniques for reducing radiation loss
As written above, an alternating current is made of
electric charge under periodic
acceleration, which causes
radiation of
electromagnetic waves.
Energy that is radiated is lost. Depending on the frequency, different
techniques are used to minimize the loss due to radiation.
---- end of quote of this part
The first sentence is very suggestive as an answer to our question <Does Alternating Current flow ?>. What is < periodic
acceleration> ? (meanwhile <As written above> is strange as this is never mentioned above>). The explanation is too simple here.
Twisted pairs
At frequencies up to about 1 GHz, pairs of wires are twisted together in a cable, forming a
twisted pair. This reduces losses from
electromagnetic radiation and
inductive coupling.
A twisted pair must be used with a balanced signalling system, so that
the two wires carry equal but opposite currents. Each wire in a twisted
pair radiates a signal, but it is effectively cancelled by radiation
from the other wire, resulting in almost no radiation loss.
--- end of quote of this part
This statement suggests <signal current moves back and forth>.
Coaxial cables
Coaxial cables
are commonly used at audio frequencies and above for convenience. A
coaxial cable has a conductive wire inside a conductive tube, separated
by a
dielectric
layer. The current flowing on the inner conductor is equal and opposite
to the current flowing on the inner surface of the tube. The
electromagnetic field is thus completely contained within the tube, and
(ideally) no energy is lost to radiation or coupling outside the tube.
Coaxial cables have acceptably small losses for frequencies up to about
5 GHz. For
microwave
frequencies greater than 5 GHz, the losses (due mainly to the
electrical resistance of the central conductor) become too large, making
waveguides
a more efficient medium for transmitting energy. Coaxial cables with an
air rather than solid dielectric are preferred as they transmit power
with lower loss.
--- end of quote of this part
This explanation also suggests <<signal current moves back and forth>.
Waveguides
Waveguides
are similar to coax cables, as both consist of tubes, with the biggest
difference being that the waveguide has no inner conductor. Waveguides
can have any arbitrary cross section, but rectangular cross sections are
the most common. Because waveguides do not have an inner conductor to
carry a return current, waveguides cannot deliver energy by means of an
electric current, but rather by means of a
guided electromagnetic field. Although
surface currents
do flow on the inner walls of the waveguides, those surface currents do
not carry power. Power is carried by the guided electromagnetic fields.
The surface currents are set up by the guided electromagnetic fields
and have the effect of keeping the fields inside the waveguide and
preventing leakage of the fields to the space outside the waveguide.
Waveguides have dimensions comparable to the
wavelength
of the alternating current to be transmitted, so they are only feasible
at microwave frequencies. In addition to this mechanical feasibility,
electrical resistance of the non-ideal metals forming the walls of the waveguide cause
dissipation of power (surface currents flowing on lossy
conductors dissipate power). At higher frequencies, the power lost to this dissipation becomes unacceptably large.
--- end of quote of this part
This explanation on
Waveguide is very suggestive on our concern - again the direction of AC (Alternating Current).
Fiber optics
At frequencies greater than 200 GHz, waveguide dimensions become impractically small, and the
ohmic losses in the waveguide walls become large. Instead,
fiber optics,
which are a form of dielectric waveguides, can be used. For such
frequencies, the concepts of voltages and currents are no longer used.
--- end of quote of this part
This statement is also very interesting.
Mathematics of AC voltages
Wik on AC (13-Dec-2013) continued
Alternating currents are accompanied (or caused) by alternating voltages. An AC voltage
v can be described mathematically as a
function of time by the following equation:
- ,
where
- is the peak voltage (unit: volt),
- is the angular frequency (unit: radians per second)
- The angular frequency is related to the physical frequency, (unit = hertz), which represents the number of cycles per second, by the equation .
- is the time (unit: second).
The relationship between voltage and the power delivered is
- where represents a load resistance.
Rather than using instantaneous power,
,
it is more practical to use a time averaged power (where the averaging
is performed over any integer number of cycles). Therefore, AC voltage
is often expressed as a
root mean square (RMS) value, written as
, because
---- End of quote
These equations remind us
The power
losses in a conductor are a product of the square of the current and the
resistance of the conductor, described by the formula
This equation is relatively easy to understand intuitively as the current flows (sorry for using <flow> here through resistor, which use power. But
is unti-intuitive as V is generally potential. But when we consider
that voltage and the unit of voltage - volt (s) are defined as
Voltage = Energy / Charge. 1 volt = 1 Joule / 1 coulomb
Energy comes in.
Anyway among the Wiki explanation on AC we cannot find any explicit explanation on our concern - the direction of AC (Alternating Current). So we must continue to seek.
--------
My very old Penguin dictionary of Electronics (printed in 1980) simply explains
in <wave>
An alternating current propagated through a long chain of network or filter behaves as if it were wave. Elementary particles, such as electrons, have associated wavelike characteristics. See also Doppler effect.
I think the word <to propagate> is more appropriate than <to flow> when to show the direction of Alternating Current.
sptt