Notes
Slide Show
Outline
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Chapter 12
  •  Magnetism and Magnetic Circuits
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The Nature of a Magnetic Field
  • Magnetism
    • Force of attraction or repulsion that acts between magnets and other magnetic materials
  • Flux lines
    • Show direction and intensity of this field at all points
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The Nature of a Magnetic Field
  • Field is strongest at poles
    • Direction is from N to S
  • Unlike poles attract
    • Like poles repel
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Ferromagnetic Materials
  • Attracted by magnets
    • Provide an easy path for magnetic flux
    • Iron, nickel, cobalt, and their alloys
  • Nonmagnetic materials such as plastic, wood, and glass
    • Have no effect on the field
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Electromagnetism
  • Many applications of magnetism involve magnetic effects due to electric currents
  • Direction of magnetic field may be determined by the Right Hand Rule
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Electromagnetism
  • Place your right hand around conductor with your thumb in the direction of the current
  • Your fingers will point in the direction of the magnetic field
    • This will always be perpendicular to the current
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Flux and Flux Density
  • Flux, F
    • Total number of lines
  • Flux density, B,
    • Number of lines per unit area
    • Divide total flux passing perpendicularly through an area by the area
  • B = F/A
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Flux and Flux Density
  • Units for magnetic flux are webers (Wb)
  • Area is measured in square meters
  • Units for flux density
    • Wb/m2 or teslas (T)
    • 1 tesla = 10 000 gauss
  • B may also be measured in gauss
  • We will work only with teslas
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Magnetic Circuits
  • Practical applications
    • Use structures to guide and shape magnetic flux
    • Called magnetic circuits
  • Magnetic circuit guides flux to an air gap
    • This provides field for the voice coil
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Magnetic Circuits
  • Playback heads on tape recorders
    • VCRs and disk drives pick up the varying magnetic field and convert it to voltage
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Air Gaps, Fringing, and
 Laminated Cores
  • Circuits with air gaps may cause fringing
  • Correction
    • Increase each cross-sectional dimension of gap by the size of the gap
  • Many applications use laminated cores
  • Effective area is not as large as actual area
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Series Elements and
Parallel Elements
  • Magnetic circuits may have sections of different materials
    • Cast iron, sheet steel, and an air gap
  • For this circuit, flux is the same in all sections
    • Circuit is a series magnetic circuit
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Series Elements and
Parallel Elements
  • A magnetic circuit may have elements in parallel
    • Sum of fluxes entering a junction is equal to the sum leaving
  • Similar to series/parallel electric circuits
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Magnetic Circuits with dc Excitation
  • Current through a coil creates magnetic flux
  •  Magnetomotive Force (MMF) Á = NI
  • N is the number of turns of the coil
  • Opposition of the circuit
    • Reluctance  = l /µA
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Magnetic Circuits with dc Excitation
  • Ohm’s Law for magnetic circuits:
    • f = Á/Â
  • Useful analogy but not a practical solution method
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Magnetic Field Intensity
  • Magnetic field strength
    • H, is the magnetomotive force (mmf) per unit length
  • H = Á/l = NI/l
  • Units are Ampere•turns/meter
  • N•I = H•l
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Relationship Between B and H
  • B and H
    • Related by the equation B = µH
      • Where µ (Greek letter mu) is the permeability of the core
  • Permeability
    • Measure for establishing flux in a material
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Relationship Between B and H
  • The larger the value of µ
    • The larger flux density for a given H
  • H is proportional to I
    • The larger the value of µ, the larger the flux density for a given circuit
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Ampere’s Circuital Law
  • Algebraic sum of mmfs around a closed loop in a magnetic circuit
    • Zero: SÁ = 0
    • Similar to KVL
    • Since Á = NI, SNI = SHl
    • NI - Hironliron - Hsteellsteel - Hglg= 0
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Series Magnetic Circuits
  • Solve a circuit where F is known
    • First compute B using F/A
    • Determine H for each magnetic section from B-H curves
    • Compute NI using Ampere’s circuital law
    • Use computed NI to determine coil current or turns as required
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Series-Parallel Magnetic Circuits
  • Use sum of fluxes principle and Ampere’s Law
  • Find B and H for each section
  • Then use Ampere’s Law
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Series Magnetic Circuits
  • Solve directly
    • NI and required to find F, for circuits with one material
    • For two or more substances
      • Cannot calculate either F or H without knowing the other
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Series Magnetic Circuits
  • Trial and error
    • Taking a guess at the flux to compute NI
    • Compare this against the given NI
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Forces Due to an Electromagnet
  • Electromagnets
    • Relays, doorbells, lifting magnets, etc.
  • Force computed from flux density, the gap area, and the permeability
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Properties of Magnetic Materials
  • Atoms produce small, atomic-level magnetic fields
  • For nonmagnetic materials, these fields are randomly arranged
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Properties of Magnetic Materials
  • For ferromagnetic materials
    • Fields do not cancel, but instead form into domains
  • If the domains in a material line up, the material is magnetized
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Magnetizing a Specimen
  • Current passed through it causes domains to line up
  • If all fields line up, material is saturated
  • If current is turned off, material will retain some residual magnetism
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Magnetizing a Specimen
  • Turning off current does not demagnetize the material
    • Some other method must be used
  • Effect is called Hysteresis
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Measuring Magnetic Fields
  • Hall effect
    • Use when a piece of metal is placed in a magnetic fields
    • Small voltage develops across it
  • Fixed current
    • Hall voltage is proportional to the magnetic field strength B
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Measuring Magnetic Fields
  • Fixed current
    • Hall voltage is proportional to the magnetic field strength B.
  • Direction of the field may be determined by the right-hand rule