Calculating the magnetic field from the Hall Voltage

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on calculating the magnetic field from the Hall Voltage in a copper sensor setup. The user initially calculated the magnetic field to be 8.018 x 10-11T, while the expected value ranged between 2 and 4 T. The error was traced back to incorrect unit conversions and the measurement of the thickness (d) of the copper sample, which should have been 12.2 x 10-2 m instead of 0.5 x 10-2 m. Correcting these values leads to an accurate calculation of the magnetic field.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Hall Effect principles
  • Familiarity with basic electromagnetism equations
  • Knowledge of unit conversions in physics
  • Proficiency in using the formula for electron density in conductors
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Homework Statement



You have built a sensor to detect the strength of unknown magnetic fields. You
use a rectangular sample of copper that is 14.2 cm wide and 0.5 cm thick. You apply a
current of 2.4 A to the copper. You know that there is a magnetic field perpendicular
to the current because you measure a Hall Voltage of 0.1μV. What was the magnitude
of the magnetic field that you detected?

Assume that one electron per atom is available for conduction. (2) Copper has a
density of 8.93 g/cm3 and a molar mass of 63.55 g/mol. (3) Remember that 1 mol of any
substance contains 6.02 x1023 atoms (Avogadro’s number).

Homework Equations



q vd B = q EH

VH = EH d = vd B d

n = \frac{\rho N_{A}}{M}

B = \frac{E_{H}}{v_{d}}

EH = \frac{V_{H}}{d}

The Attempt at a Solution



B = \frac{E_{H}}{v_{d}}

EH = \frac{V_{H}}{d}

Therefore B = \frac{V_{H}}{v_{d} d} ...

If vd = \frac{I}{n q A} ...

Then B = \frac{n q A V_{H}}{I d}

If n = \frac{\rho N_{A}}{M}

Then B = \frac{\rho N_{A} q A V_{H}}{M I d}

I worked out the following numbers (I don't know whether my error lies here or not)...

\rho = 8.93 x 10-9 kgm-3
NA = 6.02 x 1023 atoms
q = 1.602 x 10-19 C
A = 14.2 x 10-2 x 0.5 x 10-2 = 7.1 x 10-4m2
VH = 0.1 x 10-6 v
M = 63.55 x 10-3 kgmol-1
I = 2.4 A
d = 0.5 x 10-2 m

I have been stuck on this question for several hours now, and can't see where I'm going wrong. The answer I'm getting is 8.018 x 10-11T, when the answer expected is between 2 and 4 T apparently. Any help would be much appreciated :)
 
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dvd_247 said:
\rho = 8.93 x 10-9 kgm-3

Check your conversions. Do you really believe that a cube of solid copper one meter on the side has a mass of 8.93 micrograms? :rolleyes:
 
i've completed the question now, thanks for your help :) it was like you said, my conversion was completely wrong! also i was using the wrong measurement for d, it was in fact " 12.2 x 10-2 and not 0.5 x 10-2
 

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