To draw the vector diagram of a loaded alternator operating at a lagging power factor, follow these steps:
### 1. **Identify the Components**
For an alternator, you need to consider the following components in the vector diagram:
- **E**: The generated voltage or electromotive force (EMF).
- **V**: The terminal voltage of the alternator.
- **I**: The load current.
- **X_s**: The synchronous reactance of the alternator.
- **R_s**: The stator resistance (optional, but if considered, it’s in series with the synchronous reactance).
### 2. **Drawing the Vector Diagram**
1. **Draw the EMF Vector (E):**
- Draw a horizontal line to represent the EMF (\( E \)).
- This line should be horizontal, pointing to the right.
2. **Draw the Terminal Voltage Vector (V):**
- The terminal voltage (\( V \)) is usually slightly lagging behind the EMF due to the reactance of the alternator.
- Draw the vector \( V \) at an angle to the right of \( E \), reflecting the lagging nature. The angle between \( E \) and \( V \) represents the phase drop across the reactance of the alternator.
3. **Draw the Load Current Vector (I):**
- The current (\( I \)) lags the terminal voltage (\( V \)) by the power factor angle.
- Draw the current vector (\( I \)) at an angle lagging \( V \). The angle between \( V \) and \( I \) represents the power factor angle. The lagging power factor means the current vector will be to the right of \( V \).
4. **Draw the Reactance Drop Vector (I X_s):**
- The reactance drop (\( I X_s \)) is the voltage drop across the synchronous reactance.
- Draw a vector \( I X_s \) in the same direction as the EMF (\( E \)) but starting from the terminal voltage (\( V \)).
5. **Draw the Resistor Voltage Drop Vector (if applicable):**
- If you include stator resistance, the voltage drop across \( R_s \) is \( I R_s \).
- Draw this voltage drop in series with \( I X_s \) and starting from the terminal voltage.
### 3. **Label the Diagram**
- **E**: Generated EMF.
- **V**: Terminal voltage.
- **I**: Load current.
- **I X_s**: Voltage drop across synchronous reactance.
- **I R_s**: Voltage drop across stator resistance (if considered).
### Example Vector Diagram:
1. Draw \( E \) as a horizontal line.
2. Draw \( V \) slightly lagging \( E \) (downward at an angle).
3. Draw \( I \) further lagging \( V \) (downward at a greater angle).
4. Draw \( I X_s \) starting from \( V \) and extending horizontally (aligned with \( E \)).
5. If considering \( R_s \), draw \( I R_s \) in series with \( I X_s \).
This results in a vector diagram where the EMF \( E \) is the reference, the terminal voltage \( V \) lags \( E \), and the load current \( I \) lags \( V \), creating a visual representation of the phase relationships in the alternator.
Feel free to use graphing tools or software to create a more precise diagram if needed!