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Polyphase system

Polyphase electrical systems supply alternating current electrical power in overlapping phases. The most common, and almost universal, examples are three phase power systems. Three phase power is commonly found in industrial applications and LCR circuits.

These systems exhibit three-phase induction or more. Three phase power is commonly found in industrial applications. Normal household supply consists of a sine wave of alternating polarity, with the voltage rising and falling over time. This is called single phase electric power.

A few older installations in the U.S. used two-phase four-wire systems for motors. The chief advantage of these was that the winding configuration was the same as for a single-phase capacitor-start motor. Most of these have been upgraded to three-phase systems. A two-phase supply with 90 degrees between phases can be derived from a three-phase system using transformers in a Scott connection.

A polyphase coil takes advantage of the three phase's energy is made up of: induction, neutralization, and capacitance. Polyphase power is particularly useful in AC motors, where it can be used to generate a rotating magnetic field. Alternate current sine wave voltage points, when the field is graphed and analyzed, show a result of a magnetic field that is rotating (thus producing the alternating polarity). When a three-phase voltage completes one full cycle, the magnetic field has rotated through 360°. In a polyphase system several such supplies are overlapped out of phase to smooth out the total voltage.

Nikola Tesla invented these types of systems. Polyphase electrical systems operate on the principle of a alternate-current circuits' rotating magnetic field lead-lag effect. He found these systems in his research of harmonic oscillators

See also: alternating current





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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Polyphase system".