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Electromagnetic Induction. Electricity from Magnetism. Induced Current. When a conductor is moved in a magnetic field, current can be induced (caused) Faraday’s Original Experiment. Many Ways to Produce EMF. Many forms of changing magnetic field can produce Emf (current)
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Electromagnetic Induction Electricity from Magnetism
Induced Current • When a conductor is moved in a magnetic field, current can be induced (caused) • Faraday’s Original Experiment
Many Ways to Produce EMF • Many forms of changing magnetic field can produce Emf (current) • Magnet or coil or both can move • Field can turn on or off due to closing or opening a switch
Faraday’s Law (I) • Induced emf is proportional to the rate of change of magnetic fluxFB passing through a loop of area A FB = BAcosq q is angle between B and a line perpendicular to the face of the loop Flux applet Courtesy Dept. of EE Surrey University
Nature of Magnetic Flux • FB = BAcosq is a scalar • Above formula comes from “dot product” of B and A whereas F =Bqvsinq comes from “cross” or vector product B x v • Unit of magnetic flux is tesla-meter2 or weber
Ways of Changing Flux • Move coil into or out of field • Change area of coil • Rotate coil so number of field lines changes • Change field strength • Ways Flux will not change • Rotate coil around field line – doesn’t change number of field lines • Slide coil at constant angle within field
Faraday’s Law (II) • Magnetic flux is also proportional to total number of field lines passing through loop • When q = 00 magnetic flux FB = BA (A is area of loop perpendicular to magnetic field) • When q = 900 magnetic flux is zero; no field lines pass through loop. Mathematically Emf = -N DFB/ Dt • N is number of loops
Almost calculus • DFB/ Dt is time rate of change of flux
Simple example • A square loop of side a enters a region of uniform magnetic field B in time Dt = one second. Write an expression for the voltage induced during that interval • Emf =-N DFB/ Dt = -a2B/1 second =-a2B
Current direction? • How do we know in what direction, clockwise or counterclockwise the induced current will flow? • Energy conservation plays a role • Energy in the current and voltage must come from somewhere • How this works is called Lenz’s Law
Lenz’s Law • Minus sign in Faraday’s Law reminds us that • Induced current produces its own magnetic field • This field interacts with original field to make a force • Work must be done against this force to produce induced current or conservation of energy will be violated An induced emf always gives rise to a current whose magnetic field opposes the original change in flux Applet
How Current Varies • Link (demonstrates Lenz’s Law with bar magnet and loop)
In Other Words • Physical motion that induces current must be resisted by magnetic forces • Something has to do work to induce the current, otherwise energy conservation is violated
What is Direction of Current? loop Current clockwise Field in this region toward us
Changing Area – What is the direction of induced current? • Field away from us xxx • Field toward us . . . Answer to 1. CW. Induced field away to restore existing field Answer to 2. CCW. Field toward us to restore existing field Loop area shrinks
What if Loop Area Increases? • Answers reverse • 1 CCW • 2 CW
Another Example of Lenz’s Law • When field is increasing, induced field opposes it • When field is decreasing, induced field acts in the same direction Diagram courtesy Hyperphysics web site
Example: Square coil side 5.0 cm with 100 loops removed from 0.60T uniform field in 0.10 sec. Find emf induced. • Find how flux FB = BA changes during Dt = 0.10 sec. • A = • InitialFB • FinalFB =zero • Change in flux is • Emf = -(100)(-1.5 x 10-3 Wb)/(0.10 s) = 2.5 x 10–3 m2 1.5 x 10-3 Wb -1.5 x 10-3 Wb 1.5 volts
Example, continued • If resistance of coil is 100 ohms what are current, energy dissipated, and average force required? • I = emf/R = 1.5v/100 ohms = • E = Pt = I2Rt= • F = work required to pull coil out/distance = energy dissipated in coil/distance = W/d = 15mA 2.25 x 10-3 J 0.050 N Use d = 0.05 m since no flux change until one edge leaves field
EMF in a Moving Conductor Courtesy P Rubin, university of Richmond
Moving Rod Changes Area of Loop • Let rod move to right at speed v • Travels distance Dx = v Dt • Area increases by DA = LDx=L v Dt • By Faraday’s law • Emf = DFB/ Dt = BDA/Dt = BLvDt/Dt = BLv • B, L and v must be mutually perpendicular
Alternate Derivation of emf = BLv • Force on electron in rod moving perpendicular to magnetic field strength B with speed v is F=qvB acting downward • Produces emf with top of rod + • CCW conventional current as rod slides to right • Work to move a charge through rod against potential difference is • W = Fd = qvBL. Emf is work per unit charge BLv
Blv Example: Voltage across an airplane wing • Airplane with 70 m wing travels 1000 km/hr through earth’s field of 5 x 10-5 T. Find potential difference across wing. Is this dangerous? • Emf = Blv = • Could such a potential difference be used to reduce the aircraft’s need for fuel? (5.0 x 10-5 T) (70m) (280 m/s) = 1.0volt
The Generator Generators and alternators work by rotating a coil in a magnetic field. They produce alternating current.