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Line voltage is stated as "phase to phase". Phase voltage is stated as "phase to ground".

In a three phase system, each phase is 120 degrees out of phase with respect to the other two, one leading, and the other trailing.

Draw the vector diagram for this and you get three triangles inside a larger triangle, the outer sides being phase to phase and the inner sides being phase to ground. The outer triangle is equilateral, with angles of 60 degrees, and the inner triangles are isosceles with angles at the outer triangle's vertices of 30 degrees.

Look at one of the inner triangles and bisect it with a vector from ground perpendicular to the vector for phase to phase. You see a right triangle. Now you can do trigonometry...

The base is one half the phase to phase voltage. Lets call that X. In trig, cosine(theta) = X (one half phase to phase) over hypotenuse (phase to ground). Cosine 30 is 0.866, so phase to ground is one half phase to phase over 0.866, or phase to phase over 1.732.

A typical US distribution system has a three phase power at 13.2kv, phase to phase. We make that, simply, 13.2. If you measure phase to ground while the system is in relatively good balance, which it is most of the time, you get 7.62kv. We call that 7620. This is in the ratio of 1.732.

Addition: It's also just the square root of 3.

Comment">Comment

The three 'hot' conductors that supply a three-phase load are called 'line conductors', which is why the voltage between any pair is called a 'line voltage'. There is simply no such thing as a 'phase-to-phase voltage' or a 'phase-to-ground' voltage!

In a three-phase, four-wire, system, a 'phase voltage' is measured between any line conductor and the neutral conductor. In this case, the line voltage is 1.732 times the phase voltage.

In a three-phase, three-wire, system, a 'phase voltage' is measured between any pair of line conductors (there is no neutral conductor), because it is numerically-equal to the line voltage.

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11y ago

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