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Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel institute of technology

ACTIVE LEARNING ASSIGNMENT. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel institute of technology. ELEMENTS OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING(21100050). Submitted by:- Chirag Kapoor Ravi patel Jay Trivedi Yagnesh patel. GUIDED BY:- Ms. D.C.PATEL. Eddy Current Loss. Index. Introduction to eddy current

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Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel institute of technology

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  1. ACTIVE LEARNING ASSIGNMENT Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel institute of technology ELEMENTS OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING(21100050) Submitted by:- Chirag Kapoor Ravi patel Jay Trivedi Yagneshpatel GUIDED BY:- Ms. D.C.PATEL

  2. Eddy Current Loss

  3. Index Introduction to eddy current Birth of the name ”eddy current” History Effects of eddy current Generation of eddy current Ways to reduce eddy current Power dissipation of eddy current Skin effect Applications of eddy current Electromagnetic braking Electromagnetic damping Induction furnace Electric power meter

  4. Introduction to eddy current • Eddy currents (also called Foucault currents) are electric currents induced within conductors by a changing magnetic field in the conductor. • These circulating eddies of current have inductance and thus induce magnetic fields. These fields can cause repulsion, attraction, propulsion, drag, and heating effects. • The stronger the applied magnetic field, the greater the electrical conductivity of the conductor, and the faster the field changes, the greater the currents that are developed and the greater the fields produced.

  5. Birth of the name “EDDY CURRENT” • The term eddy current comes from analogous currents seen in water when dragging an oar breadthwise: localised areas of turbulence known as eddies give rise to persistent vortices. Somewhat analogously, eddy currents can take time to build up and can persist for very short times in conductors due to their inductance. Eddy Current

  6. History • French physicist Léon Foucault (1819–1868) is credited with having discovered eddy currents. In September, 1855, he discovered that the force required for the rotation of a copper disc becomes greater when it is made to rotate with its rim between the poles of a magnet, the disc at the same time becoming heated by the eddy current induced in the metal. • The first use of eddy current for non-destructive testing occurred in 1879 when David E. Hughes used the principles to conduct metallurgical sorting tests.

  7. Some Effects of eddy current • Eddy currents in conductors of non-zero resistivity generate heat as well as electromagnetic forces. The heat can be used for induction heating. • Eddy currents can also have undesirable effects, for instance power loss in transformers. In this application, they are minimized with thin plates, by lamination of conductors or other details of conductor shape. • Self-induced eddy currents are responsible for the skin effect in conductors. The latter can be used for non-destructive testing of materials for geometry features, like micro-cracks. A similar effect is the proximity effect, which is caused by externally-induced eddy currents.

  8. Generation of eddy current • Consider the apparatus shown in fig. A copper plate is allowed to swing like simple pendulum between the pole pieces of a strong magnet. It is found that the motion is damped and in a little while the plate comes to a halt in magnetic field. • This phenomenon can be explained on the basis of electromagnetic induction. Magnetic flux keeps on changing as the plate keeps on changing as the plate moves in and out of the region between the magnetic poles. Direction of eddy current are opposite when the plates swing in the region between the poles and when it swings out of the region.

  9. Ways to reduce eddy current • If rectangular slots are made in copper plates as shown figure, area available to the flow of eddy currents is less. • Thus, the pendulum plate with holes or slots reduces electromagnetic damping and the plate swings more freely. • This Fact is useful in reducing cores of transformer , electric motors and such devices..

  10. Continued…. • In todays world transformer plays an important role, which are used in every street. • The also have losses due to the eddy current. • This loss due to the eddy current is minimised by laminating the core into thin sheets. It is shown in fig how the core is laminated.

  11. Power dissipation of eddy currents • Under certain assumptions (uniform material, uniform magnetic field, no skin effect, etc.) the power lost due to eddy currents per unit mass for a thin sheet or wire can be calculated from the following equation • Where • P is the power lost per unit mass (W/kg), • Bp is the peak magnetic field (T), • d is the thickness of the sheet or diameter of the wire (m), • f is the frequency (Hz), • k is a constant equal to 1 for a thin sheet and 2 for a thin wire, • ρ is the resistivity of the material (Ω m), and • D is the density of the material (kg/m3).

  12. Skin effect • In very fast-changing fields, the magnetic field does not penetrate completely into the interior of the material. This skin effect renders the Power loss equation invalid. However, in any case increased frequency of the same value of field will always increase eddy currents, even with non-uniform field penetration

  13. Applications of eddy current • Some of the important applications of eddy current are:- • Magnetic braking in trains • Electromagnetic damping • Induction furnace • Electric power meter

  14. Continued… • Other applications are:- • Metal detectors • Conductivity meters for non-magnetic metals • Eddy current adjustable-speed drives • Eddy-current testing • Electric meters (Electromechanical Induction Meters) • Proximity sensor (Displacement sensors) • Vending machines (detection of coins) • Coating Thickness Measurements • Sheet Resistance Measurement • Eddy current separator for metal separation • Mechanicalspeedometers

  15. Electromagnetic braking • Strong electromagnets are situated above the rails in some electrically powered trains. • When the electromagnets are activated, the eddy current induced in the rails oppose the motion of train. • As there are no mechanical linkages, the braking is smooth.

  16. Electromagnetic damping • Certain galvanometers have a fixed core made of nonmagnetic metallic material. • When the coil oscillates, the eddy currents generated in the core opposes the motion and bring the coil back to rest

  17. Induction furnace • Induction furnace can be used to produce high temperatures and can be utilised to prepare alloys, by melting the constituent metals. • In this, a high frequency alternating current is passed through the coil which surrounds the metals to be melted . • The eddy currents generated in the metals produce high temperatures sufficient to melt it.

  18. Electric power meters • The shiny metal disc in the electric power meter(analogue type) rotates due to the eddy currents. • Electric currents are induced in the disc by magnetic fields produced by sinusoidally varying currents in a coil. • We can also observe the rotating shiny disc in the power meter of our house. Metal disc Electric power meter

  19. Bibliography • www.Wikipedia.org • Physics textbook by NCERT publications • Comprehensive physics by Laxmi Publications • Physics by Pradeep publications

  20. THANKYOUThe end

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