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Electrical Power Formula

Calculate electrical power using P = VI, P = I²R, and P = V²/R.
Essential for circuit design, energy consumption, and component sizing.

The Formula

P = V × I = I²R = V² / R

Electrical power measures the rate at which electrical energy is consumed or produced.

All three forms are equivalent — use whichever matches the values you know.

Variables

SymbolMeaning
PPower (Watts, W)
VVoltage (Volts, V)
ICurrent (Amperes, A)
RResistance (Ohms, Ω)

Which Form to Use

  • P = V × I — when you know voltage and current
  • P = I²R — when you know current and resistance
  • P = V² / R — when you know voltage and resistance

Example 1

A 230 V appliance draws 4 A of current. What is its power consumption?

P = V × I

P = 230 V × 4 A

P = 920 W

Example 2

A 100 Ω resistor has 2 A flowing through it. How much power does it dissipate?

P = I²R

P = (2)² × 100

P = 4 × 100

P = 400 W

When to Use It

Use the electrical power formula when you need to:

  • Calculate energy consumption of appliances and devices
  • Size fuses, circuit breakers, and wiring
  • Determine heat dissipation in resistors and components
  • Calculate electricity costs (Power × Time = Energy in kWh)

For AC circuits, the formula becomes P = V × I × cos(φ), where cos(φ) is the power factor.

The power factor accounts for the phase difference between voltage and current in reactive circuits.


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