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标题: 原创问题:中美电压差异问题 [打印本页]

作者: 新用户    时间: 2006-11-16 05:36
标题: 原创问题:中美电压差异问题

我们知道在中国,欧洲以及其他绝大多数国家,民用交流电电压为220伏。www.ddhw.com
 
但是在美国,日本和其他一些少数国家却是110伏!www.ddhw.com
 
请问,为什么?为什么美国不是220?
www.ddhw.com

 

作者: 花心石    时间: 2006-11-16 08:42
标题: 这个不是我的答案,有幸学到些新东西

How values were selected

The type of electricity delivered to homes and businesses was first direct current (DC) but then changed to AC electricity. The standard voltage level started at 110V, went to 240V, back to 110V, and then to 220V. The frequency started at 60Hz and then went to 50Hz in most areas.www.ddhw.com

Tesla starts AC

Early in the history or electricity, Thomas Edison's General Electric company was distributing DC electricity at 110 volts in the United States. Then Nikola Tesla the devised a system of three-phase AC electricity at 240 volts. Three-phase meant that three alternating currents slightly out of phase were combined in order to even out the great variations in voltage occurring in AC electricity. He had calculated that 60 cycles per second or 60Hz was the most effective frequency. Tesla later compromised to reduce the voltage to 110 volts for safety reasons.www.ddhw.com

Europe goes to 50Hz

With the backing of the Westinghouse Company, Tesla's AC system became the standard in the United States. Meanwhile, the German company AEG started generating electricity and became a virtual monopoly in Europe. They decided to use 50Hz instead of 60Hz to better fit their metric standards, but they kept the voltage at 110V.www.ddhw.com

Unfortunately, 50Hz AC has greater losses and is not as efficient as 60HZ. Due to the slower speed 50Hz electrical generators are 20% less effective than 60Hz generators. Electrical transmission at 50Hz is about 10-15% less efficient. 50Hz transformers require larger windings and 50Hz electric motors are less efficient than those meant to run at 60Hz. They are more costly to make to handle the electrical losses and the extra heat generated at the lower frequency.www.ddhw.com

Europe goes to 220V

Europe stayed at 110V AC until the 1950s, just after World War II. They then switched over to 220V for better efficiency in electrical transmission. Great Britain not only switched to 220V, but they also changed from 60Hz to 50Hz to follow the European lead. Since many people did not yet have electrical appliances in Europe after the war, the change-over was not that expensive for them.www.ddhw.com

U.S. stays at 110V, 60Hz

The United States also considered converting to 220V for home use but felt it would be too costly, due to all the 110V electrical appliances people had. A compromise was made in the U.S. in that 220V would come into the house where it would be split to 110V to power most appliances. Certain household appliances such as the electric stove and electric clothes dryer would be powered at 220V.

When visiting another country

Bringing an electrical appliance from one country to another may require some special converters, transformers and adapters to allow the appliance or device to work properly.

Converters

Converters are typically used to decrease the AC voltage from 220V to the 110V level needed by the appliance.www.ddhw.com

They are only used for simple electrical products such as hair dryers, steam irons, shavers, or small fans. They are only used for short periods of time, can only be used for ungrounded appliances, and must be unplugged from the wall when not in use.

Converters cannot be used by electronic devices such as radios or computers. A transformer is used for those devices. The reason is that a converter simply cuts the AC sine wave in half, reducing the voltage. Electronic devices need the full sine wave to function properly.

Some converters will also change AC to DC. An example is converting 120V AC to 12V DC.www.ddhw.com

Transformers

Transformers are used to increase or decrease the voltage and should be used with electronic devices such as radios, televisions, computers and other devices having electronics circuitry.www.ddhw.com

Transformers are more expensive than converters. They can also be used with electric appliances and may be operated continually for many days. A device like a hair dryer does not have any electronic circuitry. It simply has a heater element and electric fan, so it and can use either a converter or transformer.

Dual voltage devices

Some devices have a built-in converter or transformer, such that they are called dual voltage devices. Most laptop battery chargers and AC adapters are dual voltage, so they can be used with only a plug adapter for the country you are visiting.www.ddhw.com

Plug Adapters

Outlet plugs are different in the various countries. Plug adapter must often be used when visiting a different country. These adapters do not convert electricity. Rather, they simply allow a dual voltage appliance, transformer or converter from one country to be plugged into the wall outlet of another country.

Frequency difference

Converters and transformers only change the voltage and not the frequency. The result is that a motor in a 50Hz appliance will operate slightly faster on 60Hz electricity. Likewise, a clock made for 60Hz will run slower in a country using the 50Hz frequency.www.ddhw.com

Most modern electronic equipment like computers, printers, DVD players and stereos are usually not affected by the frequency difference.

Country listing

Of the over 200 countries listed below, less than 40 use 110V. Some countries use dual voltages. 43 countries use 60Hz, while the rest use 50Hz.www.ddhw.com
CountryVoltageFrequency
Afghanistan220V50Hz
Albania230V50Hz
Algeria230V50Hz
American Samoa120V60Hz
Andorra230V50Hz
Angola220V50Hz
Anguilla110V60Hz
Antigua230V60Hz
Argentina220V50Hz
Armenia230V50Hz
Aruba127V60Hz
Australia240V50Hz
Austria230V50Hz
Azerbaijan220V50Hz
Azores230V50Hz
Bahamas120V60Hz
Bahrain230V50Hz
Balearic Islands230V50Hz
Bangladesh220V50Hz
Barbados115V50Hz
Belarus230V50Hz
Belgium230V50Hz
Belize110/220V60Hz
Benin220V50Hz
Bermuda120V60Hz
Bhutan230V50Hz
Bolivia230V50Hz
Bosnia230V50Hz
Botswana230V50Hz
Brazil110-220V60Hz
Brunei240V50Hz
Bulgaria230V50Hz
Burkina Faso220V50Hz
Burundi220V50Hz
Cambodia230V50Hz
Cameroon220V50Hz
Canada120V60Hz
Canary Islands230V50Hz
Cape Verde230V50Hz
Cayman Islands120V60Hz
Central Africa220V50Hz
Chad220V50Hz
Channel Islands230V50Hz
Chile220V50Hz
China220V50Hz
Colombia110V60Hz
Comoros220V50Hz
Congo (Zaire)220V50Hz
Cook Islands240V50Hz
Costa Rica120V60Hz
Côte d'Ivoire
(Ivory Coast)
220V50Hz
Croatia230V50Hz
Cuba110/220V60Hz
Cyprus230V50Hz
Czech Republic230V50Hz
Denmark230V50Hz
Djibouti220V50Hz
Dominica230V50Hz
Dominican Republic110V60Hz
East Timor220V50Hz
Ecuador127V60Hz
Egypt220V50Hz
El Salvador115V60Hz
Equatorial Guinea220V50Hz
Eritrea230V50Hz
Estonia230V50Hz
Ethiopia220V50Hz
Faeroe Islands230V50Hz
Falkland Islands240V50Hz
Fiji240V50Hz
Finland 230V50Hz
France230V50Hz
French Guyana220V50Hz
Gaza230V50Hz
Gabon220V50Hz
Gambia230V50Hz
Germany230V50Hz
Ghana230V50Hz
Gibraltar230V50Hz
Greece230V50Hz
Greenland230V50Hz
Grenada230V50Hz
Guadeloupe230V50Hz
Guam110V60Hz
Guatemala120V60Hz
Guinea220V50Hz
Guinea-Bissau220V50Hz
Guyana240V60Hz
Haiti110V60Hz
Honduras110V60Hz
Hong Kong220V50Hz
Hungary230V50Hz
Iceland230V50Hz
India240V50Hz
Indonesia230V50Hz
Iran230V50Hz
Iraq230V50Hz
Ireland (Eire)230V50Hz
Isle of Man230V50Hz
Israel230V50Hz
Italy230V50Hz
Jamaica110V50Hz
Japan100V50/60Hz
Jordan230V50Hz
Kenya240V50Hz
Kazakhstan220V50Hz
 
CountryVoltageFrequency.
Kiribati240V50Hz
Korea, South220V60Hz
Kuwait240V50Hz
Kyrgyzstan220V50Hz
Laos230V50Hz
Latvia230V50Hz
Lebanon230V50Hz
Lesotho220V50Hz
Liberia120V60Hz
Libya127/230V50Hz
Lithuania230V50Hz
Liechtenstein230V50Hz
Luxembourg230V50Hz
Macau220V50Hz
Macedonia230V50Hz
Madagascar127/220V50Hz
Madeira230V50Hz
Malawi230V50Hz
Malaysia240V50Hz
Maldives230V50Hz
Mali220V50Hz
Malta230V50Hz
Martinique220V50Hz
Mauritania220V50Hz
Mauritius230V50Hz
Mexico127V60Hz
Micronesia120V60Hz
Moldova230V50Hz
Monaco230V50Hz
Mongolia230V50Hz
Montserrat Islands230V60Hz
Morocco220V50Hz
Mozambique220V50Hz
Myanmar (Burma)230V50Hz
Namibia220V50Hz
Nauru240V50Hz
Nepal230V50Hz
Netherlands230V50Hz
Netherlands Antilles127/220V50Hz
New Caledonia220V50Hz
New Zealand230V50Hz
Nicaragua120V60Hz
Niger220V50Hz
Nigeria240V50Hz
Norway230V50Hz
Okinawa100V60Hz
Oman240V50Hz
Pakistan230V50Hz
Palmyra Atoll120V60Hz
Panama110V60Hz
Papua New Guinea240V50Hz
Paraguay220V50Hz
Peru220V60Hz
Philippines220V60Hz
Poland230V50Hz
Portugal230V50Hz
Puerto Rico120V60Hz
Qatar240V50Hz
Réunion Island230V50Hz
Romania230V50Hz
Russian Federation230V50Hz
Rwanda230V50Hz
St. Kitts & Nevis Islands230V60Hz
St. Lucia Island240V50Hz
St. Vincent Island230V50Hz
Saudi Arabia127/220V60Hz
Senegal230V50Hz
Serbia & Montenegro230V50Hz
Seychelles240V50Hz
Sierra Leone230V50Hz
Singapore230V50Hz
Slovakia230V50Hz
Slovenia230V50Hz
Somalia220V50Hz
South Africa230V50Hz
Spain230V50Hz
Sri Lanka230V50Hz
Sudan230V50Hz
Suriname127V60Hz
Swaziland230V50Hz
Sweden230V50Hz
Switzerland230V50Hz
Syria220V50Hz
Tahiti110/220V60Hz
Tajikistan220V50Hz
Taiwan110V60Hz
Tanzania230V50Hz
Thailand220V50Hz
Togo220V50Hz
Tonga240V50Hz
Trinidad & Tobago115V60Hz
Tunisia230V50Hz
Turkey230V50Hz
Turkmenistan220V50Hz
Uganda240V50Hz
Ukraine230V50Hz
United Arab Emirates220V50Hz
United Kingdom230V50Hz
United States110/220V60Hz
Uruguay220V50Hz
Uzbekistan220V50Hz
Venezuela120V60Hz
Vietnam220V50Hz
Virgin Islands110V60Hz
Western Samoa230V50Hz
Yemen230V50Hz
Zambia230V50Hz
Zimbabwe220V50Hz

Exceptions

Some countries can't decide on a standard.

Brazil

In Brazil, most states use between 110V and 127V AC electricity. But many hotels use 220V. In the capital Brasilia and in the northeast of the country, they mainly use 220-240V.

Japan

In Japan, they use the same voltage everywhere, but the frequency differs from region to region. Eastern Japan, which includes Tokyo, uses 50Hz. In western Japan, which includes Osaka and Kyoto, they use 60 Hz.www.ddhw.com

The reason for this is that after World War II, Britain was in charge of helping reconstruct Japan's electrical system in the easter part of the country and the United States set up the electricity in the western part of Japan. Since Great Britain (United Kingdom) had been using 60Hz before the war and had just switched over to the European 240V 50Hz, it is strange that they set up Japan at 100V and 50Hz, especially when the U.S. was using 60Hz. www.ddhw.com

Having different voltages and frequencies within the country not only must be confusing for the people but also can result in extra costs for appliances and adapters.

In conclusion

The voltage and frequency of AC electricity varies from country to country throughout the world. Most use 220V and 50Hz. About 20% of the countries use 110V and/or 60Hz to power their homes. 220V and 60Hz are the most efficient values, but only a few countries use that combination. The United States uses 110V and 60Hz AC electricity.www.ddhw.com

from: http://www.school-for-champions.com/science/ac_world_volt_freq.htm#listing


 

www.ddhw.org---



作者: 花心石    时间: 2006-11-16 08:46
标题: 看看各种各样的答案吧[:-K]

Why does Australia have a 240-volt electricity supply when the United States has 110 volt?

Houses in the US get 240V from the street to the house meter box, which then dropsto 120V for distribution to house wall outlets. Historically, Edison decided on 110V because that's the voltage his light bulbs worked on. We learnt from America's mistakes and use 240V in Australia because less energy is lost as heat in cables behind the walls.
Russell Wild, Kincumberwww.ddhw.com

The lower voltage in the US has human safety as a main reason. In some third-world countries, it can be as high as 440, which is fatal if touched.
Dr. J.N. Parikh, Sydney

Only an American could ask this. Almost all of the world is 240 volts and 50 cycles electricity. It's the USA, and I think Japan, who have 110 volts and 60 cycles. Just like mobile phones work anywhere in the world except the USA unless one has the latest model.
George Everson, Crestwood

We have an electrifiying currency here in Australia; in the USA, their one is shocking!
 Steve Barrett, Glenbrookwww.ddhw.com

AC (alternating current) electricity voltage varies throughout the world. Under the guidance of Nikola Tesla, the discoverer of alternating-current power transmission, the US began in the late 1800s using 240 volts but later reduced it to 110V for safety reasons. Europe stayed at 110V AC until the 1950s when they switched over, as did Australia and much of the world, to 220-240V for more efficient electrical transmission. The US also considered converting to 220-240V for home use but decided it would be too costly, due to all the 110V electrical appliances people had.
 John Moir, Mollymookwww.ddhw.com

 The 110 volts used in USA & Canada is for most domestic appliances . Domestic stoves, however are sometimes are 220 volts and some commercial buildings have 300 volts or other irregular voltages for lighting. Our system is consistent for most applications, and is similar to most of the world (e.g. Europe) where 220 or 230 volts is used. Our appliances will run on these voltages, and our own supply is now 230 volts, I believe, Greg Lilly, NSW



 

www.ddhw.org---



作者: 花心石    时间: 2006-11-16 08:53
标题: 意外收获,这个该有用吧

http://www.voltageconverters.com/voltageguide.htm
www.ddhw.com

 

www.ddhw.org---



作者: husonghu    时间: 2006-11-16 20:19
标题: 好象for safety reasons是对的. 谢谢花心石MM的礼品[>:D<][>:D<]

  好象for safety reasons是对的. 谢谢花心石MM的礼品





作者: 220V我不怕    时间: 2006-11-17 03:24
标题: 回复:原创问题:中美电压差异问题

请先弄明白一件事,是电压高对人危险,还是电流大对人危险,或以数据为准:交流220V电你一下,和交流20A电你一下,你知道结果是什么?


 

作者: 新用户    时间: 2006-11-17 04:07
标题: 我认为你的这个问题有问题 [:-M]

我认为电压高对人体危害大,严格的说来应该是电势差(=电压)大,对人体更有害。
 
人体的电阻是固定的,电势差大,就可以在人体造成较大的电流从而使人体受损。所以我认为判定安全性,电压是唯一的指标。
 
你说交流20A,指的是在人体中产生20A的电流吗?如果是,那么就一定需要一定数量的电压。用36V的电压,在人体中产生20A的电流是不可能的!
www.ddhw.com


原贴:
文章来源: 220V我不怕 于 2006-11-16 19:24:15
标题:回复:原创问题:中美电压差异问题


请先弄明白一件事,是电压高对人危险,还是电流大对人危险,或以数据为准:交流220V电你一下,和交流20A电你一下,你知道结果是什么?


 

www.ddhw.com

 

作者: 新用户    时间: 2006-11-17 04:13
标题: 谢谢花心石MM,给出的回答出乎我的意料!

其实,我并不确信正确的答案应该是什么。但是我发现我的理解跟花心石MM给出的解答一致。
 
我认为:
传输过程中,电压越高,损耗就越小。(记得中学学过这个)。尽管多数情况下都是高压传输(成千上万伏),但是在居民区传输应该是一般的民用电压。所以,从这点考虑,220V比较合理。
 
但是从安全性的角度考虑110V好更好一些。110V远远的大于安全电压36V,但是却比220V安全很多。老美应该比较重视安全。所以他们更愿意使用110。
www.ddhw.com

 

作者: 220V我不怕    时间: 2006-11-17 23:15
标题: 回复:我认为你的这个问题有问题 [:-M]

这么说吧,让你接上衡压220V电源和让你接上衡流20A电源.


 

作者: 新用户    时间: 2006-11-17 23:30
标题: 回复:回复:我认为你的这个问题有问题 [:-M]

让人接上衡压220V电源,一般情况下,会被电击死亡。www.ddhw.com

人体的电阻一般在10,000~100,000欧姆之间,那么如果使用220V. 就会产生0.022~0.0022 A的电流。

也就是说人体中如果产生0.022A的电流就可以至人死亡。(当然其中的过程比较复杂)

所以,20A当然一定会让人死亡。

但是,如何才能在人体产生20A 电流呢?这需要 20x10000=200,000 V得电压。

所以,当你让我比较220V电压与20A电流的时候,你其实在让我比较 220V 与 200,000V 的差别。

 



原贴:
文章来源: 220V我不怕 于 2006-11-17 15:15:27
标题:回复:我认为你的这个问题有问题


这么说吧,让你接上衡压220V电源和让你接上衡流20A电源.
www.ddhw.com

 



 


作者: 我也不怕220V    时间: 2006-11-18 07:54
标题: 回复:回复:回复:我认为你的这个问题有问题 [:-M]

你知道什么是恒流源?


 

作者: 哈和哈    时间: 2006-11-24 09:36
标题: 回复:你的意思就是,恒流源插哪,哪都是恒流?别搞笑了,

你以为恒压源接哪,哪就是恒压?别搞哭了
www.ddhw.com

 

作者: 220V怕我也    时间: 2006-11-25 10:48
标题: 回复:原创问题:中美电压差异问题

谁说美国不用220V?
你们家的电炉(电热丝),烘干机(电热丝),电暖气(电热丝)就是220.
工厂里就更多了,马达以220V,370V为多,加热器220V占多数,大楼外的大汞灯,-----
总之,凡是功率过1000瓦的,大多需要220V.理由不需要多说了,已有人答了.
经常看到求助广告:因带来了大陆的什么什么电器产品,需要110V转换到220V的变压器.
经有关人士的帮助,从求助者的家里直接接出了220V,而且功率上3000瓦一点没问题.
www.ddhw.com

 





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