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![]() KB6NU's Ham Radio Blog /////////////////////////////////////////// Champion again! Posted: 11 Jan 2016 01:59 PM PST http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/kb6nu...m_medium=email This just showed up in my mailbox: How cool is this? WithÂ*21 CW QSOs, 13 phone QSOs, and 29 multipliers, yielding a total score of 1,972, I placed first from the state of Michigan, and #27 overall in the 2015 Minnesota QSO PartyÂ*(MNQP). You can see all of the results, plus a couple of interesting profiles of MNQP participants, by downloading this PDF. The 18th annual Minnesota QSO Party, presented by the Minnesota Wireless AssociationÂ*takes place onÂ*Saturday, February 6th, 2016 fromÂ*8:00 AM CST (1400 UTC) Through 6 PM CST (2400 UTC). If you live in Minnesota, please listen for me. Ill be in there, defending my title. The post Champion again! appeared first on KB6NUs Ham Radio Blog. /////////////////////////////////////////// 2016 Extra Class Study Guide: E5A - Resonance and Q Posted: 11 Jan 2016 11:28 AM PST http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/kb6nu...m_medium=email Its hard to believe that its been four years since I wrote the first edition of my No Nonsense Extra Class study guide. It has been, though, and now its time to update the study guide to cover the 2016 2020 question pool.Â*Heres the first updated section. There have been several question changes in this section. They removed questions that asked you to calculate the resonant frequency or half-power bandwidth and added questions talking about Q and the consequences of having lower or higher Q. Heres the updated section: E5A Resonance and Q: characteristics of resonant circuits; series and parallel resonance; Q; half-power bandwidth; phase relationships in reactive circuits Resonance is one of the coolest things in electronics. Resonant circuits are what makes radio, as we know it, possible. What is resonance? Well, a circuit is said to be resonant when the inductive reactance and capacitive reactance are equal to one another. That is to say, when 2Ï€fL = 1/2Ï€fC where L is the inductance in henries and C is the capacitance in farads. For a given L and a given C, this happens at only one frequency: f = 1/2π√(LC) This frequency is called the resonant frequency. Resonance in an electrical circuit is the frequency at which the capacitive reactance equals the inductive reactance.(E5A02) Lets calculate a few resonant frequencies, using questions from the Extra question pool as examples: The resonant frequency of a series RLC circuit if R is 22 ohms, L is 50 microhenrys and C is 40 picofarads is 3.56 MHz. (E5A14) f = 1/2π√(LC) = 1/(6.28 x √(5010-6 x 4010-12)) = 1/(2.8 x 10-7) = 3.56 MHz Notice that it really doesnt matter what the value of the resistance is. The resonant frequency would be the same is R = 220 ohms or 2.2 Mohms. The resonant frequency of a parallel RLC circuit if R is 33 ohms, L is 50 microhenrys and C is 10 picofarads is 7.12 MHz. (E5A16) f = 1/2π√(LC) = 1/(6.28x√(5010-6 x 1010-12)) = 1/(1.410-7) = 7.12 MHz When an inductor and a capacitor are connected in series, the impedance of the series circuit at the resonant frequency is zero because the reactances are equal and opposite at that frequency. If there is a resistor in the circuit, that resistor alone contributes to the impedance. Therefore, the magnitude of the impedance of a series RLC circuit at resonance is approximately equal to circuit resistance. (E5A03) The magnitude of the current at the input of a series RLC circuit is at maximum as the frequency goes through resonance. (E5A05) The reason for this is that neither the capacitor or inductor adds to the overall circuit impedance at the resonant frequency. When the inductor and capacitor are connected in parallel, the impedances are again equal and opposite to one another at the resonant frequency, but because they are in parallel, the circuit is effectively an open circuit. Consequently, the magnitude of the impedance of a circuit with a resistor, an inductor and a capacitor all in parallel, at resonance, is approximately equal to circuit resistance. (E5A04) Because a parallel LC circuit is effectively an open circuit at resonance, the magnitude of the current at the input of a parallel RLC circuit at resonance is at minimum. (E5A07) The magnitude of the circulating current within the components of a parallel LC circuit at resonance is at a maximum. (E5A06) Resonance can cause the voltage across reactances in series to be larger than the voltage applied to them. (E5A01) Another consequence of the inductive and capacitive reactances canceling each other is that there is no phase shift at the resonant frequency. The phase relationship between the current through and the voltage across a series resonant circuit at resonance is that the voltage and current are in phase. (E5A08) Ideally, a series LC circuit would have zero impedance at the resonant frequency, while a parallel LC circuit would have an infinite impedance at the resonant frequency. In the real world, of course,Â*resonant circuits don’t act this way. To describe how closely a circuit behaves like an ideal resonant circuit, we use the quality factor, or Q. Because the inductive reactance equals the capacitive reactance at the resonant frequency, the Q of an RLC parallel circuit is the resistance divided by the reactance of either the inductance or capacitance (E5A09): Q = R/XL or R/XC The Q of an RLC series resonant circuit is the reactance of either the inductance or capacitance divided by the resistance (E5A10): Q = XL/R or XC/R Basically, the higher the Q, the more a resonant circuit behaves like an ideal resonant circuit,and the higher the Q, the lower the resistive losses in a circuit. Lower losses can increase Q for inductors and capacitors. (E5A15) An effect of increasing Q in a resonant circuit is that internal voltages and circulating currents increase. (E5A13) Q is an important parameter when designing impedance-matching circuits. The result of increasing the Q of an impedance-matching circuit is that matching bandwidth is decreased. (E5A17) A circuit with a lower Q will yield a wider bandwidth, but at the cost of increased losses. A parameter of a resonant circuit that is related to Q is the half-power bandwidth. The half-power bandwidth is the bandwidth over which a series resonant circuit will pass half the power of the input signal and over which a parallel resonant circuit will reject half the power of an input signal. We can use the Q of a circuit to calculate the half-power bandwidth: BW = f/Q Let’s look at some examples: The half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant circuit that has a resonant frequency of 7.1 MHz and a Q of 150 is 47.3 kHz. (E5A11) BW = f/Q = 7.1 x 106/150 = 47.3 x 103 = 47.3 kHz What is the half-power bandwidth of a parallel resonant circuit that has a resonant frequency of 3.7 MHz and a Q of 118 is 31.4 kHz. (E5A12) BW = f/Q = 3.5 x 106/118 = 31.4 x 103 = 31.4 kHz The post 2016 Extra Class Study Guide: E5A Resonance and Q appeared first on KB6NUs Ham Radio Blog. |
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