EED203 Electrical Machines (1) : Lesson 2: Introductory Concepts Magnetic Circuits-Quantities and Definitions
EED203 Electrical Machines (1) : Lesson 2: Introductory Concepts Magnetic Circuits-Quantities and Definitions
EED203
Electrical Machines(1)
2
2
Magnetic Fields and Polarity
Permanent Magnets Direction convention: From N to S
Magnetic
Field
Flux Density, B
Number of flux lines/ unit area
N
A1
A2
A1
F
S Mathematically B=
A
A2 Where:
Flux lines B = flux density (Teslas ,T or Wb/m2)
Symbol: F A = area (m2)
Units: Webers
3
3 (Wb)
F= flux (Wb)
Magnetic Forces
Magnetic field converted to mechanical force
Opposite
Poles S N S N
Attract No flux
Force Force
bunching
Flux
Like Poles
S N N S bunching
Repel
causes
Force Force repulsion
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Electromagnetism
Currents flowing in wires produce magnetic flux
Current
I
Voltage
Source, V
Y1 Y1 X1 X1
Direction of flux line
(Conventional current)
Y1 I into X1 I into
page page
Right-hand Rule
Thumb – current
Fingers –direction of
5
5 flux
Magnetomotive Force of a Coil
N = number of
turns in coil
Given a coil
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Magnetic Field Intensity of a Coil
L Magnetic field intensity, H
(MMF gradient of coil)
Amount of MMF dropped over
length
NI F
Mathematically H= =
L L
Ferromagnetic
core (iron)
L = mean
+
path length Core has cross
-
(m) sectional area
V A (m2) = LxW
L
W
F
Where: F = MMF (A-t)
Magnetic Circuit F NI
F= = R = Reluctance (A-t/Wb)
Relationship R R F = flux (Wb)
F N = coil turns (t)
So R=
8
8 F I = coil current (A)
Reluctance of Magnetic Circuits
Coil reluctance related to core geometry and material
From previous math relationships F = H L
F = B A
Substitute into equation from last slide and simplify
L
R=
B
A
H
B and H depend on magnetic core material and relationship is usually non-linear
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Magnetization Curves
Free
B-H curves different for each type of material Space
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Magnetic Permeability
Permeability - Amount of magnetic field intensity required to produce a
given flux density for a given material.
B
Mathematically m=
H
Where: B = flux density (Wb/m2)
H = magnetic field intensity (A-t/m)
m = permeability (Wb/A-t-m)
Characteristics:
• similar to resistivity in conductors
• not a constant for a given material
• larger m, less H required to produce given B
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Relative Permeability
Relative permeability - Ratio of material’s permeability to that of free space
m
mr =
m0
Where:
m0 = permeability of free space
(4p x 10-7 Wb/A-t-m)
m = permeability of material (Wb/A-t-m)
mr = relative permeability (dimensionless)
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Reluctance formulas In Terms of
Permeability
R depends on:
type of magnetic material m
length of circuit, L
cross-sectional area of circuit, A
so L
R=
mA
mr.m0 m from previous relationship, so
L
R=
m0mr A
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Calculation Examples
Computing flux density:
A magnetic flux of 0.0046 Wb passes through a core cross sectional
dimensions of 10 cm x 17 cm. Find the flux density.
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Calculation Examples
Computing MMF and H:
A coil for a solenoid is 20 cm long and made up of 200 turns of wire.
This wire has a dc resistance of 2.25 W. The solenoid is connected to a
100 V dc source. Find the MMF the coil produces and the magnetic
field intensity.
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Calculation Examples
Computing Reluctance and Permeability:
A magnetic core made of cast steel must carry a flux density of 1.0 T. It
has a total length of 1.56 m. and a cross-sectional area of .37 m2. Find the
permeability, the relative permeability and reluctance of the core.
Use B-H curve from text. For a B=1.0 T H = 800 A-t/m
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