What is Phase Difference?
A detailed diagram explaining the concept of phase difference using waveforms and a phasor diagram. On the left, a graph shows two sinusoidal waves, VA and VB. Wave VB is shifted to the left of wave VA, with the horizontal distance between their corresponding zero-crossings labeled as 'φ phase difference'. The text states, "VB leads VA by φ". On the right, a phasor diagram shows the vector VA on the horizontal axis and the vector VB rotated counter-clockwise by an angle 'φ', which is labeled the 'phase angle'. A red curved arrow indicates that the counter-clockwise direction is the 'leading direction'. Mathematical formulas VA = Vm sin θ
and VB = Vm sin(θ + φ)
are displayed at the top.
In the study of alternating current (AC) circuits, signal processing, and wave mechanics, phase difference is a fundamental concept that describes the timing relationship between two or more periodic waves of the same frequency. It essentially measures how much one wave is "ahead" or "behind" another. The provided image offers an excellent visual explanation of this concept using both waveform graphs and phasor diagrams.
Phase difference (often denoted by the Greek letter phi, φ) is the angular separation between two points on different waves that have the same frequency. It's typically measured in degrees or radians.
The image expertly uses two common methods to represent phase difference:
1. The Waveform Diagram (Time-Domain)
The graph on the left shows two sinusoidal voltages, VA
and VB
, plotted over time or angle.
VA
starts at zero and follows a standard sine curve, represented by the formula VA = Vm sin θ
.VB
is shifted to the left compared to VA
. This means that VB
reaches its key points (like its peak value and zero-crossing) earlier than VA
. Because it occurs earlier, we say that VB
leads VA
.φ
. Mathematically, this leading relationship is shown by adding the phase angle in the sine function: VB = Vm sin(θ + φ)
.2. The Phasor Diagram (Frequency-Domain)
A phasor is a vector used to represent a sinusoidal quantity's amplitude and phase angle. Phasor diagrams simplify the analysis of AC circuits.
VA
is typically drawn along the positive horizontal axis, acting as the reference.VB
leads VA
by an angle φ
, its phasor is drawn at an angle φ
rotated in the counter-clockwise direction from VA
. The counter-clockwise direction is the standard convention for a leading phase.Understanding the difference between "leading" and "lagging" is crucial.
Leading Phase (+φ): As shown in the image, a quantity leads another if it occurs earlier in time. In the formula, this is represented by a positive (+) phase angle, e.g., sin(θ + φ)
. On a phasor diagram, the leading phasor is rotated counter-clockwise.
Lagging Phase (-φ): A quantity lags another if it occurs later in time. This would be represented by a negative (-) phase angle, e.g., sin(θ - φ)
. On a phasor diagram, the lagging phasor would be rotated clockwise from the reference.
+φ
.-φ
.