Calculate apparent power (VA) in AC/DC circuits using voltage, current, power factor, resistance, or impedance. Supports single, two, and three-phase systems for electrical engineering.
Apparent power is the vector sum of active and reactive power, representing total power supplied by the source.
It is measured in Volt-Ampere (VA) and is crucial for sizing transformers, generators, and circuit breakers.
Apparent power (S) is the total power flowing in a circuit, regardless of whether it performs useful work. It is calculated as:
Where:
P = Active power (W), Q = Reactive power (VAR)
V = Voltage (V), I = Current (A)
The unit is Volt-Ampere (VA). Larger systems use kVA (kilovolt-ampere) or MVA (megavolt-ampere).
In a three-phase system:
S = √3 × VL-L × IL
Where:
VL-L = Line-to-line voltage
IL = Line current
Note: This assumes balanced loads. For unbalanced systems, sum individual phase powers.
No. Real (active) power (P) is the power that performs useful work (e.g., heat, motion). Apparent power (S) includes both real and reactive components. They are equal only when power factor = 1.
They form a right triangle known as the **power triangle**:
Where φ is the phase angle between voltage and current.
Apparent power determines the capacity of electrical equipment like transformers, cables, and switchgear. Utilities use it to bill commercial/industrial customers and assess system loading.
| Parameter | Description |
|---|---|
| Current Type | Select the type of current: • Direct Current (DC): Constant flow; S = V × I • Alternating Current (AC): Reverses direction periodically System configurations: – Single-phase: Phase + neutral – Two-phase: Two phases (± neutral) – Three-phase: Three phases (± neutral) |
| Voltage | Electric potential difference. • Single-phase: Enter Phase-Neutral voltage • Two/Three-phase: Enter Phase-Phase voltage |
| Current | Flow of charge, measured in amperes (A) |
| Active Power | Useful power consumed (W). Formula: P = V × I × cosφ |
| Reactive Power | Energy oscillation in inductors/capacitors (VAR). Formula: Q = V × I × sinφ |
| Power Factor | PF = P / S = cosφ. Ranges from 0 to 1. |
| Resistance | Opposition to DC current. R = ρ × l / A (Ω) |
| Impedance | Total AC opposition: Z = √(R² + (XL − XC)²) (Ω) |
Apparent power \( S \) is defined as:
S = √(P² + Q²)
Alternatively:
This calculator adheres to IEC 60050 standards and supports accurate apparent power analysis in real-world electrical systems.