- Inverse Fourier Transform: Apply the inverse Fourier transform to convert the phasor representation back to the time-domain sinusoidal waveform. The inverse Fourier transform converts complex phasors into sinusoidal functions. You can use the "IFFT" block of Simulink as given by this MATLAB R2024a documentation link: https://www.mathworks.com/help/dsp/ref/ifft.html
- Trigonometric Identities: You can also use trigonometric identities to express the phasor in terms of sine and cosine functions. For example, if you have a phasor with magnitude (u_m) and phase angle (theta): [ u(t) = u_m*sin(2*pi*freq*t + theta) ] where: "u(t)" is the instantaneous voltage at time "t" and "freq" is the frequency (usually 50 Hz). Please adjust the phase angle by 120° or -120° for positive or negative sequences respectively. The resulting expression represents the sinusoidal waveform in the time domain. You can plot this waveform to visualize its behavior over time.
Conversion of abc unbalanced waveforms to balanced symmetrical components waveforms
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I want to convert my three phase unbalanced sinusoidal waveforms to its balanced symmetrical component waveforms. I'm getting phasor(real and imaginary) of symmetrical component waveform but I want the sinusoidal waveform. How can I extract that.
Please help me regarding to this.
Thanking You
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Accepted Answer
Abhimenyu
on 29 May 2024
Hi Yojan,
I understand that you want to convert the three-phase unbalanced sinusoidal waveforms to their balanced symmetrical component waveforms.
To obtain the sinusoidal waveform from the phasor representation, you can use either of the below-given methods:
The phasor representation captures the frequency and phase information, while the sinusoidal waveform provides the time-domain behavior. By applying the inverse operations as mentioned above, you can reconstruct the original waveform.
I hope this helps!
4 Comments
DGM
on 22 Jun 2024
You're asking someone who pastes answers from an AI. They have posted nearly 90 answers, but they have never once responded to a followup question. That's expected behavior when someone uses AI to blindly answer questions to which they have no answer themselves.
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