When capacitors or inductors
are involved in an AC circuit, the current and voltage do not peak at
the same time. The fraction of a period difference between the peaks
expressed in degrees is said to be the phase difference. The phase
difference is <= 90 degrees. It is customary to use the angle by
which the voltage leads the current. This leads to a positive phase for
inductive circuits since current lags the voltage in an inductive
circuit. The phase is negative for a capacitive circuit since the
current leads the voltage. The useful mnemonic ELI the ICE man helps to remember the sign of the phase. The phase relation is often depicted graphically in a phasor diagram.
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