Hey guys,
On Engineering Pro Guides' Full Exam, there is one question regarding transformer change in impedance that I don't quite understand.
Question 32 of this exam gives a 3-phase transformer rated at 480 V/120 V with an actual impedance of 10<30° ohms. If the transformer is run at a voltage of 400 V, then what will be the change in impedance?
The solution states that the impedance is reduced by the square of the voltage change:
Z new = 10<30° * (400 V/480 V)^2 = 6.94<30° ohms
The change in impedance is 10<30° - 6.94<30° = 3.06<30° ohms.
What I don't quite follow is where that formula comes from...
Z new = Z old * (Vnew / Vold)^2
Z new / Z old = (Vnew / Vold)^2
The best explanation I can think of is this...
S = V^2 / Z --> (V new^2 / Z new) = (V old^2 / Z old) --> (V new^2 / V old^2) = (V new / V old)^2 = (Z new / Z old)
The problem I think i see with that is if the transformer primary voltage is decreased, I would expect the apparent power S to decrease instead of the transformer impedance Z...
Can anyone help provide an explanation for this? Thanks for any input!
On Engineering Pro Guides' Full Exam, there is one question regarding transformer change in impedance that I don't quite understand.
Question 32 of this exam gives a 3-phase transformer rated at 480 V/120 V with an actual impedance of 10<30° ohms. If the transformer is run at a voltage of 400 V, then what will be the change in impedance?
The solution states that the impedance is reduced by the square of the voltage change:
Z new = 10<30° * (400 V/480 V)^2 = 6.94<30° ohms
The change in impedance is 10<30° - 6.94<30° = 3.06<30° ohms.
What I don't quite follow is where that formula comes from...
Z new = Z old * (Vnew / Vold)^2
Z new / Z old = (Vnew / Vold)^2
The best explanation I can think of is this...
S = V^2 / Z --> (V new^2 / Z new) = (V old^2 / Z old) --> (V new^2 / V old^2) = (V new / V old)^2 = (Z new / Z old)
The problem I think i see with that is if the transformer primary voltage is decreased, I would expect the apparent power S to decrease instead of the transformer impedance Z...
Can anyone help provide an explanation for this? Thanks for any input!