Calculating wire lenght for an air core inductor

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on building an air core inductor using an array of six PV cells rated at 0.5V and 720mA each. The participants clarify that connecting the cells in series will yield a total of 3V at 720mA, while parallel connections increase current without raising voltage. The optimum wire length for the inductor is estimated at around 250 feet of 22-gauge Formvar wire, which is suitable for the required resistance. The design aims to create a magnetic field that can induce motion, with considerations for switching mechanisms and the impact of using Neodymium magnets for efficiency. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding electrical principles and the implications of different configurations for the PV cells.
Robin07
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I would like to build an air coil that will create a flux field, which will in turn induce a closed loop coil, that results in an equal and opposite force. The power source is an array of PV cells hooked up in series or parallel which ever will give the air coil the greatest/strongest magnetic field. If I understand this correctly series will increase the amperage and parallel will increase voltage. The closed loop coil may or may not be constructed with a soft iron core.

To make one of these arrays I'm starting off with 6 PV cells that are rated at 1/2V @ 720ma each. How do I calculate the optimum length of wire for the air coil and the closed loop coil?

This question may be too easy to answer for you EEs, so I would rather understand the calculations involved than be given the answer, since the design may alter in the prototyping process it would be better for me to understand what I'm doing.

Thanks
Robin07
 
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I'm not quite understanding what it is you're trying to do; you may have left out some important details. PV cells produce DC, which will certainly produce a B field around your inductor, but it will not couple to a secondary winding because a static field can not transfer energy.
 
If you put solar cells in series their voltages will add, just like batteries.

So, your cells
6 PV cells that are rated at 1/2V @ 720ma each would give 3 volts at 720 mA if they were fully lit by the sun and placed in series.

If you put them in parallel, the result will be the same voltage as anyone of them, but the combined current of all of them. Again, just like batteries.
 
PV cells in series increases voltage. You will optimally transfer power to a resistive load if it is about 3V/0.72A = 4.16 ohms. You have a choice of several wire gauges for your coil. I list a few and their resistances:

18 Ga 6.5 ohms per 1000 ft
20 Ga 10.4 ohms per 1000 ft
22 Ga 16.5 ohms per 1000 ft (probably best choice- so about 250 feet)
24 ga 26.2 ohms per 1000 ft
26 ga Too thin for 720 mA

Use Formvar coated wire if possible. A dc current in a coil will NOT induce currents in any other coil.
 
Thanks vk6kro, I stand corrected...series adds voltage and parallel adds amps.

Thanks for pointing that out negitron and Bob S the B field that is to be used will be switching on and off repeatedly so that the B field will be expanding and collapsing at a fairly high rate. The rate of switching is determined by the strength of the induced B field, which hasn't been determined as of yet. So, will I need to have the PV cells hooked up in series or parallel to produce the strongest B field possible, I would imagine that maximum amps will do what I'm looking for.

There must be a method to determine optimum wire length...?
 
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Sorry Bob S, I posted the above while you were posting your response. From your post I calculated 3V x 0.72A = 2.16 not 4.16 ohms. Can you clarify how you came to 4.16 ohms?
I understand how you determined approx. 250' of 22Ga Formvar wire to carry 4.16 ohms, its simple division, thanks.
 
Robin07 said:
Sorry Bob S, I posted the above while you were posting your response. From your post I calculated 3V x 0.72A = 2.16 not 4.16 ohms. Can you clarify how you came to 4.16 ohms?
I understand how you determined approx. 250' of 22Ga Formvar wire to carry 4.16 ohms, its simple division, thanks.
6PV cells in seriies @ 0.5 volts each is 3 volts. 3 volts divided by 0.72 amps = 4.16 ohms.
 
If you are planning to switch the output of the solar cell array, putting the cells in series would probably be the best way.

Putting them in parallel would give you more current, but the device you use for switching would use up some of your voltage and with only 0.5 volts, you wouldn't have any to spare.

Even in series, 3 volts isn't much and any forces you can generate will be quite small.
 
OK, fair enough, voltage may be the better choice here. Correct me but 6 PVs hooked up in a combination of series and parallel could give me 2.5V and 1.44A, this would leave me .5V for the switching device and the maximum voltage for induction. Understand that the switching device is not a mechanism at all but a physical turning away from the source, mainly sunlight, does this switching. In consideration of that, would I still need to take into account the .5V for the switching?

I guess I should be more clear of this design. If you take a rod of let's say 100mm long
x 4mm in diameter, take a skinned softball leaving only the inner foam core. Drill and insert the rod through its' center so that the assemble is balanced. The foam core will have three channels machined into it, each 120 degrees of off center relative to each other, which will house the 250' 22Ga Formvar coated wire. This wire is and forms a closed loop c\w the PV Cells. When the cells and coil are activated, which it is part of, will setup an oriented magnetic field. And If I understand it correctly, as in a homo polar motor. When current moves from point A to point B the force that the wire experiences is tangent to the wire and this will cause the assembly to turn or in this case rotate, at which time the second set of the three PV arrays will be exposed to the light and so on... I'm tickled pink to find that I will need 250 of wire per coil because this lends to weight on the outer extremities of the ball which will likely lend it self to some sort of fly wheel principal adding source input.

There are a few other principals that are involved in the total design but those are on another forum(s).

I don't want to miss lead anyone here but the assemble I described has been around for a while now, I'm simply modifying to get more electricity out.

I must give credit to Xez and Berkeman for the insights. Thanks again.
 
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Correct me but 6 PVs hooked up in a combination of series and parallel could give me 2.5V and 1.44A, this would leave me .5V for the switching device and the maximum voltage for induction. Understand that the switching device is not a mechanism at all but a physical turning away from the source, mainly sunlight, does this switching. In consideration of that, would I still need to take into account the .5V for the switching?

You would need 5 PE cells to get 2.5 volts and this would still only be able to deliver 0.72 Amps if that is what the individual cells could deliver. If the cells were not being switched you would not lose the any voltage in a switching device.

If you used strong Neodymium magnets and good bearings it should work well. You will probably need more solar panels though. Three banks of 6 would be a start.
 
  • #11
Ok, I'm confused now, 5 PV cells hooked up in series will give me 2.5V, we agree there. Now if I hook up the 6th PV cell in parallel to the 5 PV cell array this should give me 2.5V @ 1.44 amps...No? why not, do we just negate the 6th cell? what happened to its out put? Or, let's say we were going for the most amperage. I would then hook all 6 of them in parallel and the out put should read 1/2V @ 4.32 amps. If I should need .5V for the switching device. I would then hook up 5 PV cells in parallel and hook the 6th to that in series, giving me 1/2V @ 3.2 amps. Is this true?

Where and how is it that you would use NIBs in this assembly?
 
  • #12
Robin07 said:
Ok, I'm confused now, 5 PV cells hooked up in series will give me 2.5V, we agree there. Now if I hook up the 6th PV cell in parallel to the 5 PV cell array this should give me 2.5V @ 1.44 amps...No? why not, do we just negate the 6th cell? what happened to its out put? Or, let's say we were going for the most amperage. I would then hook all 6 of them in parallel and the out put should read 1/2V @ 4.32 amps. If I should need .5V for the switching device. I would then hook up 5 PV cells in parallel and hook the 6th to that in series, giving me 1/2V @ 3.2 amps. Is this true?

Where and how is it that you would use NIBs in this assembly?

A bit of basic theory here. If you have 5 cells and put them in series and then put a 6th one across them, the 5 will try to discharge into the single cell. This is because they have a combined voltage of 2.5 volts in this case and the single cell only has 0.5 volts. The output would only be 0.5 volts if you did that.

So, you could put them in series/parallel, but you need equal numbers of cells in each branch.

You could have all 6 in parallel.
You could have two sets of 3 in series and put them in parallel.
You could have 3 sets of 2 in series and then put these in parallel.
Or you could just put them all in series.
 
  • #13
vk6kro said:
If you used strong Neodymium magnets and good bearings it should work well. You will probably need more solar panels though. Three banks of 6 would be a start.

Thanks, in this design the nibs are the bearing, reducing friction to a minimum. Steel roller bearings, no matter the quality, I have found no successes in.
 
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