Alternating Current Common Exam Traps

Overview

Alternating Current Common Exam Traps summarises frequent mistakes made in H2 Physics questions on alternating current, rms values, transformers, transmission, and rectification.

Many AC questions are conceptually simple, but marks are often lost through wrong quantity selection or misuse of formulas.

Use this page as a final revision checklist together with Alternating Current.

Definition

An exam trap is a predictable mistake caused by:

  1. choosing the wrong AC quantity
  2. mixing waveform values inconsistently
  3. reversing a transformer ratio
  4. misdescribing rectified output
  5. ignoring unit conversion

Why It Matters

Most alternating-current errors are not difficult derivation errors. They come from confusing rms with peak values, treating transformers as power amplifiers, or forgetting that rectified output is still time-varying. Cleaning up these basics makes AC questions high-scoring.

Key Representations

1. Confusing Peak Value with RMS Value

Trap:

Using or directly in appliance power calculations.

Correction:

Use rms values unless the question explicitly states peak values.

2. Assuming Mean Current Zero Means No Power

Trap:

Since mean current over a full cycle is zero, concluding average power is zero.

Correction:

Power depends on square terms:

So average power is positive even though mean current is zero.

3. Mixing Peak and RMS Quantities in One Formula

Trap:

Using:

without conversion.

Correction:

Use either all rms quantities, or derive properly from instantaneous expressions.

Standard exam form:

4. Wrong Transformer Current Ratio

Trap:

Writing:

Correction:

Current ratio is inverse of voltage ratio. For an ideal transformer:

5. Assuming a Transformer Increases Power

Trap:

Believing a step-up transformer creates extra energy.

Correction:

Ideal transformer:

Voltage and current change, but ideal total power stays the same.

6. Forgetting Cable Loss Depends on

Trap:

Thinking doubling current only doubles transmission loss.

Correction:

Cable heating loss:

So doubling current gives four times the loss.

7. Using the Wrong Voltage in Transmission Questions

Trap:

Using the consumer voltage instead of the transmission-line voltage when finding line current.

Correction:

Use:

with the voltage at the stage specified in the question.

8. Saying Rectified Output Is Pure DC

Trap:

Calling rectifier output constant DC.

Correction:

Rectified output is usually:

  • one direction only
  • varying magnitude with time

So it is pulsating DC unless smoothing is added.

9. Thinking Full-Wave Output Reverses Direction

Trap:

Assuming current through the load changes direction every half-cycle.

Correction:

In bridge rectification, diode pairs switch so current through the load remains in the same direction.

10. Forgetting Frequency Change in Full-Wave Rectification

Trap:

Thinking pulse frequency equals input frequency.

Correction:

Both half-cycles produce output pulses, so ripple frequency doubles.

If input frequency is :

  • half-wave output pulse rate =
  • full-wave output pulse rate =

11. Wrong Interpretation of Household Mains Voltage

Trap:

Thinking 240 V means maximum voltage.

Correction:

240 V means:

Peak voltage:

12. Ignoring Units

Trap:

Mixing kV, V, kW, W, mA, and A.

Correction:

Convert first before substitution.

Quick Self-Check Checklist

Before final answer, ask:

  • Did I use rms or peak correctly?
  • Are all quantities in consistent units?
  • Is transformer current ratio inverted correctly?
  • Did I use rms current in the cable-loss formula?
  • Is rectified output pulsating or smoothed?
  • Is the quoted mains voltage rms?

Summary

Most AC mistakes come from:

  1. peak versus rms confusion
  2. wrong transformer ratios
  3. forgetting losses
  4. misunderstanding rectification
  5. careless unit conversion

If these are controlled, alternating-current questions become much more reliable.