Electric motor(calc. angular velocity

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the angular velocity of a wheel driven by an electric motor with a power output of 25W and a moment of inertia of 3 kg*m^2, factoring in an efficiency of 60%. The initial attempt at deriving the angular velocity used an incorrect formula, leading to a result of 10.80 rad/s, while the correct answer is approximately 8.4 rad/s. Participants emphasize the importance of incorporating efficiency into the calculations, as it affects the power delivered to the wheel. Clarifications about the relationship between power, torque, and angular velocity are also discussed, highlighting that the torque may not be constant due to the nature of the problem. Ultimately, the correct approach involves using energy concepts to derive the angular velocity accurately.
antoman
Messages
11
Reaction score
0
First of all I am sorry for my awful english.

Homework Statement


Electric motor starts turning wheel with a constant power of P=25W and J=3 kg*m^2. With what angular velocity the wheel spins after 7s(from start), if the efficiency is 60%

Homework Equations


P=M*ω
M=J*α

The Attempt at a Solution



Ok so i have equation that gives correct number(solution) for this particular case, but i want to to know how did guy that wrote it came up with it and if its correct anyway.
so, equation is:
ω=sqrt((2*P*t)/J)=10,80 rad/s.
Correct answer is ω≈8.4 rad/s (100% correct its from our exam)

I tried to get to this equation by myself so i did this:
ω=P/M=P/(J*α)=P*t/(J*ω) so
ω^2=P*t/J
ω=sqrt(P*t/J)

The other thing that bothers me is that efficiency is not iven used. So any help how to develop correct equation would be nice.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Power times time is total energy. Efficiency tells you how much of the total energy becomes the kinetic energy of the rotating wheel.
 
antoman said:
Ok so i have equation that gives correct number(solution) for this particular case, but i want to to know how did guy that wrote it came up with it and if its correct anyway.
so, equation is:
ω=sqrt((2*P*t)/J)=10,80 rad/s.
Correct answer is ω≈8.4 rad/s (100% correct its from our exam)
The above method uses energy concepts. If you recall the formula for the rotational KE of an object, you should be able to see where the formula comes from.

To me, the statement of the problem is not very clear on whether the given power is the power of the motor or the power delivered to the wheel. Apparently, it's the power of the motor. So, as voko pointed out, you need to take the efficiency into account to get the power delivered to the wheel.

I tried to get to this equation by myself so i did this:
ω=P/M=P/(J*α)=P*t/(J*ω) so
ω^2=P*t/J
ω=sqrt(P*t/J)

Here you are using P = Mω where P is the power delivered to the wheel and M is the instantaneous torque (moment). This equation holds at each instant of time. You are given that P is constant and you know that ω is not constant. So, is M constant or not? If not, then you can't use constant acceleration equations such as ω = αt.
 
Last edited:
Here you are using P = Mω where P is the power delivered to the wheel and M is the instantaneous torque (moment). This equation holds at each instant of time. You are given that P is constant and you know that ω is not constant. So, is M constant or not? If not, then you can't use constant acceleration equations such as ω = αt.

Problem is i don't know if M is constant, but guessing from what you wrote its not, so my equations are all wrong.

The above method uses energy concepts. If you recall the formula for the rotational KE of an object, you should be able to see where the formula comes from.

So... Wrot=2*ω^(2)/J
ω^2=Wrot*2/J

edited: A=Wk2-Wk1 --> A=Wrot

:smile:
ω=sqrt((A*2*η)/J)=8,366 rad/s

Thanks :)
 
Last edited:
antoman said:
Problem is i don't know if M is constant, but guessing from what you wrote its not, so my equations are all wrong.
No need to guess. Use logic. If P = Mω and you know that P is constant while ω is not constant, then you can deduce whether or not M is constant.

So... Wrot=2*ω^(2)/J
ω^2=Wrot*2/J

edited: A=Wk2-Wk1 --> A=Wrot

It will help a lot if whenever you use a symbol, you state what the symbol represents. What do the symbols Wrot, Wk2, Wk1, and A stand for?
 
TSny said:
No need to guess. Use logic. If P = Mω and you know that P is constant while ω is not constant, then you can deduce whether or not M is constant.
It will help a lot if whenever you use a symbol, you state what the symbol represents. What do the symbols Wrot, Wk2, Wk1, and A stand for?

Wrot...KE
Wk1.. KE at t=0
Wk2...KE when t=7
A.. work
 
Last edited:
antoman said:
Wrot=2*ω^(2)/J

Are you sure you are using the correct formula for rotational kinetic energy?

[EDIT]
ω^2=Wrot*2/J

Ok, this looks correct.
 
  • Like
Likes 1 person

Similar threads

Back
Top