Jano L. said:
vanhees71, all mentioned formulations of the Faraday law are basically equivalent, since one may be derived from the other in most situations. I agree though that one may be more suggestive and less prone to erroneous application than the other, depending on the situation.
In our case, the integral formulation with fixed loop and surface is still correct, only it is not very useful.
If we connect the center and the rim by static wire, we create electric circuit and have current. Let's imagine static loop ##\partial A## going through the disk and the wire. Then the Faraday law implies
$$
\oint_{\partial A} \mathbf E\cdot d\mathbf S = - \frac{d}{dt}\int_A \mathbf B \cdot d\mathbf S.
$$
This is fine, because in fact both magnetic and electric field are static fields, and thus both sides of the equation vanish.
Clearly the law in this form is not very useful.
How to explain the current then?
The key is to realize that the electromotive force in a circuit is not given by the electric field alone, but there may be other contributions, sometimes denoted by ##\mathbf E^*## (magnetic force, effective driving forces due to chemical reaction in a cell, concentration gradients etc.)
The emf is then given by
$$
\epsilon = \oint_{\partial A} \mathbf E + \mathbf E^* \cdot d \mathbf l.
$$
In our case, this additional intensity is due to the magnetic field, so
$$
\epsilon = \oint_{\partial A} \mathbf E + \mathbf v\times \mathbf B\cdot d \mathbf l.
$$
Since the electric field is electrostatic, only the magnetic contribution to emf is non-zero, and turns out to be ##\omega BR/2##.
(As as sidenote, in a sense the integral formulation of the Faraday law is more general than the differential formulation, because the integrals can handle field discontinuities neatly, while with the differential form, we have to write down the equations for the jumps separately.)