1 / 16

Inductors

Inductors. PH 203 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 20. Finding emf. e = -N(d F /dt) But the magnetic flux depends on the changing current and the properties of the coil e = -L(di/dt) where the constant of proportionality L is the inductance. Inductance.

trudy
Télécharger la présentation

Inductors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Inductors PH 203 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 20

  2. Finding emf e = -N(dF/dt) • But the magnetic flux depends on the changing current and the properties of the coil e = -L(di/dt) • where the constant of proportionality L is the inductance

  3. Inductance • The unit of inductance is the henry, • Equating the two expressions for e e = L(di/dt) = N(dF/dt) L = N(dF/di) • Inductance is a property of the circuit element • Like resistance or capacitance

  4. Solenoid Inductance • To find L, we need a relationship between F and I for a solenoid • Flux in general: • F = BA cos q or F = BA • B = m0(N/l)i or i = Bl/(m0N) • L = N(dF/di) = NF/i = NBAm0N/Bl = m0N2A/l L = m0n2Al • Note: • N is number of turns, n is number of turns per meter

  5. Inductors • In a circuit any element with a high inductance is represented by an inductor • We will assume that the rest of the circuit has negligible inductance • Symbol is a spiral:

  6. Motional emf • If we make the loop larger or smaller, or move it in or out of a field, we will induce a potential • remember emf is a potential difference (or voltage) • How does motion in a field translate to voltage?

  7. Consider a conductor of length L sliding on a frame with velocity v but Dx = vDt, so DA = LvDt DF/Dt = BDA/Dt = (BLvDt)/Dt e = BLv Motional emf - Derived DA X B field into page v L x Dx in time Dt

  8. Motional emf -- Direction • If the area decreases, the flux decreases and thus the induced B field is in the same direction as the original

  9. Motional emf Energy • How is energy related to motional emf? • The loop feels a magnetic force you have to overcome • The energy goes into the electrical energy of the current in the loop P = i2R

  10. Power and Motional emf • Since e = BLv and e = iR, we can write: i = BLv/R P = B2L2v2/R • Large loops with low resistance moving fast in a large magnetic field will have a lot of electrical energy and thus require more work input

  11. Eddy Currents • Imagine a loop moving out of a magnetic field • If the object is not a loop, circular currents can still be induced which have the same effect • Called eddy currents

  12. Eddy Braking • The field from the eddy currents will produce a force opposite the motion • Can produce magnetic braking • No physical contact with disk, so no wear

  13. Next Time • Read 30.8-30.12 • Problems: Ch 30, P: 21, 29, 31, 48, 51

  14. What is the direction of current in the loop from the PAL (seen from top down)? • clockwise • counterclockwise • left • right • down

  15. A ring undergoes thermal expansion while in a uniform magnetic field. If the current induced in the loop is clockwise, what is the direction of the magnetic field? • left • right • into the page • out of the page • counterclockwise

  16. A bar magnet held north pole up is dropped straight down through a face up coil of wire. What is the direction of the current in the coil as the magnet enters and leaves the coil? • clockwise, counterclockwise • counterclockwise, clockwise • clockwise, clockwise • counterclockwise, counterclockwise • no current is induced

More Related