Electric Motors and Generators

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Electric Motors and Generators

Electric Machine device that can convert either


mechanical energy to electrical energy or electrical energy to mechanical energy mechanical to electrical: generator electrical to mechanical: motor all practical motors and generators convert energy from one form to another through the action of a magnetic field

Transformer device that converts ac electric energy at


one voltage level to ac electric energy at another voltage level
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It operates on the same principles as generators and motors, i.e., it depends on the action of a magnetic field to accomplish the change in voltage level

Magnetic Field acts as the medium for transferring and


converting energy.
Electrical System
Magnetic Coupling Field

Mechanical System

Motors, Generators, and Transformers are ubiquitous in modern daily life. Why?
Electric power is: Clean, Efficient, Easy to transmit over long distances Easy to control, Environmental benefits
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Gausss Law Faradays Law

Maxwells Equations
Extension of Amperes Law
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Linear DC Machine

F=i eind

( B) = ( v B )i

Smooth frictionless rails Uniform-density magnetic field Bar of conducting metal

VB iR eind = 0 Fnet = ma

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Observations
The same machine acts as both motor and generator.

Generator: externally applied forces are in the direction of motion Motor: externally applied forces are opposite to the direction of motion
Electrically

eind > VB, machine acts as a generator eind < VB, machine acts as a motor
Whether the machine is a motor or a generator, both induced force (motor action) and induced voltage (generator action) are present at all times. This machine was a generator when it moved rapidly and a motor when it moved more slowly, but whether it was a motor or a generator, it always moved in the same direction.
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Without current, this inductor has neither electric nor magnetic fields.

Ampere + Faraday + Lenz


An increasing current produces an increasing magnetic field in the inductor, which in turn produces an electric field. The emf resulting from that electric field opposes the current increase.

A steady current produces only a steady magnetic field.

Electric Motors and Generators

A decreasing current produces a decreasing magnetic field in the inductor, which in turn produces another electric field. The resulting emf opposes the current decrease.
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Some Observations
Mechanical motion can be used to produce electric power electric generators. Electric power can be used to produce mechanical motion electric motors. Motors are everywhere! Generators are less common power plants, cars, emergency power equipment. Motors come in many shapes and sizes, e.g. washing machine, cell phone, fan, etc., and operate from either direct current or alternating current.

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Some Questions
How can a moving object push electric charges through a wire and produce electricity? How does the power company determine how much power it needs to generate? If everyone turned off their lights, would the power company still have to generate the same amount of electricity? How can magnetic forces cause something to spin? Why cant a motor be built exclusively from permanent magnets? What determines which way a motor spins? Why are some motors safe near flammable chemicals while others are not?
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AC Electric Generators: Mechanical Power Becomes Electric


The spinning magnet of a generator produces an alternating magnetic field within a coil of wire and thereby induces an alternating emf in it. The only important difference between a transformer and a generator is in what produces the alternating magnetic field. Both devices have a coil wrapped around a magnetizable core. But, in place of the transformers primary coil, the generator has a spinning magnet or rotor. The core forms a magnetic bridge between rotor and coil, conveying the rotors magnetic field into the coil even when they are separated in space.
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What happens with the lamp unplugged? Now plug in the lamp. What happens?

Transformer: electricity produces magnetism produces electricity

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Question
When you pedal a high-tech exercise bicycle, you are spinning the rotor of an electric generator. That generator supplies power to a heating filament with an adjustable electrical resistance. How should the bicycle alter that electrical resistance to make pedaling more difficult?

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The induced emf in a generator depends on three factors: number of turns in the coil magnetic field strength frequency at which the magnetic field alternates Linear DC Machine F=i eind

( B) = ( v B )i

Smooth frictionless rails Uniform-density magnetic field Bar of conducting metal

VB iR eind = 0 Fnet = ma
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Question
During periods of excessive power consumption, the electric grid occasionally reduces the voltage it supplies by about 5%. What can a generator do to lower its output voltage without changing its alternation frequency?

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AC Electric Motors: Electric Power Becomes Mechanical


Motors and generators are the same in structure. It acts as a generator when you do work on its rotor and as a motor when you extract work from its rotor. What is reversed about them is the direction of current flow.
AC Synchronous Motor
The rotor turns in perfect synchrony with current from an AC electric power source. When this type of motor is plugged into a 60-Hz electrical outlet, its rotor spins exactly 60 times per second (or an integer fraction of that if the rotor has multiple pairs of poles.)
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DC Electric Motors
Most portable devices are powered by batteries and direct current. What would happen if you sent direct current through the coil of an AC synchronous motor?

Direct Current ?

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What has to happen to keep the rotor spinning? Flipping a coils magnetism is as simple as reversing its current. There are two common approaches: brushless DC motors and brushed DC motors. A brushless DC motor is a synchronous AC motor plus a high-tech switch that reverses current whenever the rotors poles have aligned with opposite poles on the stationary coil.

Brushless DC Motor

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A brushless DC motor uses an electromagnet to spin its magnetic rotor. A sensor monitors the orientation of the rotor and reverses current in the electromagnet each time the rotor aligns with the magnetic field.

Electric Motors and Generators

Computer Fan

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The electromagnetic coil is on the rotor and the permanent magnet is stationary.

A brushed DC motor spins its electromagnet rotor in the field of a permanent magnet. Each time the rotor aligns with the magnetic field, its commutator reverses the current in the electromagnet.

Brushed DC Motor
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