Mutual Inductance of Rotor Loops
Mutual Inductance of Rotor Loops
Mutual Inductance of Rotor Loops
inductance of
Rotor Loops
What is Mutual inductance?
•is the process by which an EMF is induced in one
loop of wire as a result of a changing electric
current in a second loop of wire.
•We already saw mutual inductance in action when
discuss transformers.
•Induction motor (asynchronous or AC current motor)
powered at the stator, while the rotor induces
current.
Rotor Loops
• The rotor conductors form loops that are
now intersected (linked) by a changing
amount of magnetic flux.
• As the stator field rotates, the flux linking
any given rotor loop is zero whenever the
stator field points in a direction parallel.
Illustration of Rotor Loops
• The transformer, for example, is a fundamental
example of mutual inductance.
• A transformer is able to either increase or
decrease the voltage and current levels of their
supply, without modifying its frequency and the
amount of electrical power.
What is induced EMF?
•It can be defined as the generation of a
potential difference in a coil due to the
changes in the magnetic flux through it.
• In simpler words, electromotive force or
EMF is said to be induced when the flux
linking with a conductor or coil changes
What is magnetic Flux?
• The magnetic flux Φ is analogous to the electric current.
• The magnetomotive force, mmf or f, is analogous to the electromotive
force V and may be considered the factor that sets up the flux.
• The mmf is equivalent to a number of turns of wire carrying an electric
current and has units of ampere-turns.
• If either the current through a coil (as in an electromagnet) or the number
of turns of wire in the coil is increased, the mmf is greater, and if the rest
of the magnetic circuit remains the same, the magnetic flux increases
proportionally.
What is the process of inducing emf?
An emf is induced in the coil when a bar magnet is
pushed in and out of it.
Emfs of opposite signs are produced by motion in
opposite directions, and the emfs are also reversed
by reversing poles.
The same results are produced if the coil is moved
rather than the magnet it is the relative motion that
is important.
•Whenever there is a change in the
magnetic flux linked with a closed circuit
an emf is produced.
•This emf is known as the induced emf
and the current that flows in the closed
circuit is called induced current
•Mutual inductance is the effect of one
coil's magnetic field on another coil's
magnetic field.
•Mutual inductance is the basis of eddy
current inspection.
•Any electrically conductive object will
conduct an induced current if it is placed in
a changing magnetic field.
•Eddy currents are circular induced currents
If a coil of wire is placed in a changing magnetic field, a current will
be induced in the wire. This current flows because something is
producing an electric field that forces the charges around the wire
• The changing magnetic field creates an electric field directly in the wire
(and in all other regions of space nearby) which causes electrons in the
wire to move.