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UPB / ETTI O.DROSU Electrical Engineering 2. Lecture 9: Faraday’s Law Of Electromagnetic Induction; Displacement Current; Complex Permittivity and Permeability. Objectives. To study Faraday’s law of electromagnetic induction; displacement current; and complex permittivity and permeability.
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UPB / ETTIO.DROSUElectrical Engineering 2 Lecture 9: Faraday’s Law Of Electromagnetic Induction; Displacement Current; Complex Permittivity and Permeability 1
Objectives • To study • Faraday’s law of electromagnetic induction; displacement current; • and complex permittivity and permeability. 2
Fundamental Laws of Electrostatics • Integral form • Differential form 3
Fundamental Laws of Magnetostatics • Integral form • Differential form 4
Electrostatic, Magnetostatic, and Electromagnetostatic Fields • In the static case (no time variation), the electric field (specified by E and D) and the magnetic field (specified by B and H) are described by separate and independent sets of equations. • In a conducting medium, both electrostatic and magnetostatic fields can exist, and are coupled through the Ohm’s law (J = sE). Such a situation is called electromagnetostatic. 5
Electromagnetostatic Fields • In an electromagnetostatic field, the electric field is completely determined by the stationary charges present in the system, and the magnetic field is completely determined by the current. • The magnetic field does not enter into the calculation of the electric field, nor does the electric field enter into the calculation of the magnetic field. 6
The Three Experimental Pillars of Electromagnetics • Electric charges attract/repel each other as described by Coulomb’s law. • Current-carrying wires attract/repel each other as described by Ampere’s law of force. • Magnetic fields that change with time induce electromotive force as described by Faraday’s law. 7
toroidal iron core switch compass battery secondary coil primary coil Faraday’s Experiment 8
Faraday’s Experiment • Upon closing the switch, current begins to flow in the primary coil. • A momentary deflection of the compassneedle indicates a brief surge of current flowing in the secondary coil. • The compass needle quickly settles back to zero. • Upon opening the switch, another brief deflection of the compass needle is observed. 9
S C Faraday’s Law of Electromagnetic Induction • “The electromotive force induced around a closed loop Γ is equal to the time rate of decrease of the magnetic flux linking the loop.” 10
Faraday’s Law of Electromagnetic Induction • S is any surface bounded by Γ integral form of Faraday’s law 11
Faraday’s Law Stokes’s theorem assuming a stationary surface S 12
Faraday’s Law • Since the above must hold for any S, we have differential form of Faraday’s law (assuming a stationary frame of reference) 13
Faraday’s Law • Faraday’s law states that a changing magnetic field induces an electric field. • The induced electric field is non-conservative. 14
Lenz’s Law • “The sense of the emf induced by the time-varying magnetic flux is such that any current it produces tends to set up a magnetic field that opposes the change in the original magnetic field.” • Lenz’s law is a consequence of conservation of energy. • Lenz’s law explains the minus sign in Faraday’s law. 15
Faraday’s Law • “The electromotive force induced around a closed loop Γis equal to the time rate of decrease of the magnetic flux linking the loop.” • For a coil of N tightly wound turns 16
S Γ Faraday’s Law • S is any surface bounded by Γ 17
Faraday’s Law • Faraday’s law applies to situations where • (1) the B-field is a function of time • (2) ds is a function of time • (3) B and ds are functions of time 18
Faraday’s Law • The induced emf around a circuit can be separated into two terms: • (1) due to the time-rate of change of the B-field (transformer emf) • (2) due to the motion of the circuit (motional emf) 19
Faraday’s Law transformer emf motional emf 20
2 - B v + 1 Moving Conductor in a Static Magnetic Field • Consider a conducting bar moving with velocity v in a magnetostatic field: • The magnetic force on an electron in the conducting bar is given by 21
2 - B v + 1 Moving Conductor in a Static Magnetic Field • Electrons are pulled toward end 2. End 2 becomes negatively charged and end 1 becomes + charged. • An electrostatic force of attraction is established between the two ends of the bar. 22
Moving Conductor in a Static Magnetic Field • The electrostatic force on an electron due to the induced electrostatic field is given by • The migration of electrons stops (equilibrium is established) when 23
Moving Conductor in a Static Magnetic Field • A motional(or “flux cutting”) emfis produced given by 24
Electric Field in Terms of Potential Functions • Electrostatics: scalar electric potential 25
Electric Field in Terms of Potential Functions • Electrodynamics: 26
Electric Field in Terms of Potential Functions • Electrodynamics: vector magnetic potential • both of these potentials are now functions of time. scalar electric potential 27
Ampere’s Law and the Continuity Equation • The differential form of Ampere’s law in the static case is • The continuity equation is 28
Ampere’s Law and the Continuity Equation • In the time-varying case, Ampere’s law in the above form is inconsistent with the continuity equation 29
Ampere’s Law and the Continuity Equation • To resolve this inconsistency, Maxwell modified Ampere’s law to read displacement current density conduction current density 30
Ampere’s Law and the Continuity Equation • The new form of Ampere’s law is consistent with the continuity equation as well as with the differential form of Gauss’s law qev 31
Displacement Current • Ampere’s law can be written as where 32
Displacement Current • Displacement current is the type of current that flows between the plates of a capacitor. • Displacement current is the mechanism which allows electromagnetic waves to propagate in a non-conducting medium. • Displacement current is a consequence of the three experimental pillars of electromagnetics. 33
z A ic + z = d e id z = 0 - Displacement Current in a Capacitor • Consider a parallel-plate capacitor with plates of area A separated by a dielectric of permittivity e and thickness d and connected to an ac generator: 34
Displacement Current in a Capacitor • The electric field and displacement flux density in the capacitor is given by • The displacement current density is given by • assume fringing is negligible 35
Displacement Current in a Capacitor • The displacement current is given by conduction current in wire 36
Conduction to Displacement Current Ratio • Consider a conducting medium characterized by conductivity s and permittivity e. • The conduction current density is given by • The displacement current density is given by 37
Conduction to Displacement Current Ratio • Assume that the electric field is a sinusoidal function of time: • Then, 38
Conduction to Displacement Current Ratio • We have • Therefore 39
Conduction to Displacement Current Ratio • The value of the quantity s/we at a specified frequency determines the properties of the medium at that given frequency. • In a metallic conductor, the displacement current is negligible below optical frequencies. • In free space (or other perfect dielectric), the conduction current is zero and only displacement current can exist. 40
good conductor good insulator Conduction to Displacement Current Ratio 41
Complex Permittivity • In a good insulator, the conduction current (due to non-zero s) is usually negligible. • However, at high frequencies, the rapidly varying electric field has to do work against molecular forces in alternately polarizing the bound electrons. • The result is that Pis not necessarily in phase with E, and the electric susceptibility, and hence the dielectric constant, are complex. 42
Complex Permittivity • The complex dielectric constant can be written as • Substituting the complex dielectric constant into the differential frequency-domain form of Ampere’s law, we have 43
Complex Permittivity • Thus, the imaginary part of the complex permittivity leads to a volume current density term that is in phase with the electric field, as if the material had an effective conductivity given by • The power dissipated per unit volume in the medium is given by 44
Complex Permittivity • The term we E2 is the basis for microwave heating of dielectric materials. • Often in dielectric materials, we do not distinguish between s and we, and lump them together in we as • The value of seff is often determined by measurements. 45
Complex Permittivity • In general, both e and e depend on frequency, exhibiting resonance characteristics at several frequencies. 46
Complex Permittivity • In tabulating the dielectric properties of materials, it is customary to specify the real part of the dielectric constant (e / e0) and the loss tangent (tand) defined as 47
Complex Permeability • Like the electric field, the magnetic field encounters molecular forces which require work to overcome in magnetizing the material. • In analogy with permittivity, the permeability can also be complex 48
Maxwell’s Equations in Differential Form for Time-Harmonic Fields in Simple Medium 49
Maxwell’s Curl Equations for Time-Harmonic Fields in Simple Medium Using Complex Permittivity and Permeability complex permeability complex permittivity 50