Faradays law/Lens law: how does the induced emf 'act'

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on understanding how induced electromotive force (emf) behaves in a current-carrying conductor, particularly in motors. When a current flows through a coil, it generates an induced emf that opposes the motion, leading to a decrease in current as the motor stabilizes. The analogy of a paddle wheel in water illustrates how inertia and resistance affect the flow of current, suggesting that friction corresponds to resistance in the circuit. The induced emf does not continuously build up to completely oppose the motion due to the limitations imposed by circuit resistance, which ensures that some current always flows. Ultimately, the relationship between current, resistance, and induced emf is complex, but the system reaches a steady state where the current is determined by the supply voltage and circuit resistance.
thisischris
Messages
26
Reaction score
1
Hello everyone.

I'm trying to understand how an 'induced' emf behaves on a current carrying conductor.

Basically the example that's giving me problems is in the case of a motor, if a current starts to pass through a coil it will get an induced 'emf' to oppose the motion. And hence it seems the current drops as the motor reaches a stable speed.

My question lies in 'how' it acts, I'm imaging a current in one direction, being passed another current of opposite direction, but why doesn't it 'get stronger/reaches a emf to completely oppose the motion'?

Thank you :smile:
 
Physics news on Phys.org
hi thisischris! :smile:
thisischris said:
My question lies in 'how' it acts, I'm imaging a current in one direction, being passed another current of opposite direction, but why doesn't it 'get stronger/reaches a emf to completely oppose the motion'?

does this help? (from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_analogy) …
A heavy paddle wheel placed in the current. The mass of the wheel and the size of the blades restrict the water's ability to rapidly change its rate of flow (current) through the wheel due to the effects of inertia, but, given time, a constant flowing stream will pass mostly unimpeded through the wheel, as it turns at the same speed as the water flow. The mass and surface area of the wheel and its blades are analogous to inductance, and friction between its axle and the axle bearings corresponds to the resistance that accompanies any non-superconducting inductor.​
 
tiny-tim said:
hi thisischris! :smile:


does this help? (from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_analogy) …
A heavy paddle wheel placed in the current. The mass of the wheel and the size of the blades restrict the water's ability to rapidly change its rate of flow (current) through the wheel due to the effects of inertia, but, given time, a constant flowing stream will pass mostly unimpeded through the wheel, as it turns at the same speed as the water flow. The mass and surface area of the wheel and its blades are analogous to inductance, and friction between its axle and the axle bearings corresponds to the resistance that accompanies any non-superconducting inductor.​

So 'friction' acts as resistance which corresponds to a 'drop' in emf? Should I view this 'opposed' emf in the motor as a resistance to the larger current?

I still don't quite understand why the induced emf does not keep building to completely oppose the motion however?

Thank you.
 
Friction is another issue. The (inductive) reaction against a change in current doesn't involve any loss of energy.
It is impossible to discuss, meaningfully, the totally 'ideal' situation, in which a voltage source of no resistance is connected to an inductor of no resistance because no current could pass. This is because the rate of current change would be such as to produce a back emf equal to the supply voltage.
In reality, there is a limit to the conductance of a circuit so the current is limited by the resistance and the 'back' emf is never quite equal to the supply voltage so some current will always flow, eventually reaching a value of V/R, where R is the circuit resistance.
So your confusion is quite justified, I think. :smile:
 
Thread 'Motional EMF in Faraday disc, co-rotating magnet axial mean flux'
So here is the motional EMF formula. Now I understand the standard Faraday paradox that an axis symmetric field source (like a speaker motor ring magnet) has a magnetic field that is frame invariant under rotation around axis of symmetry. The field is static whether you rotate the magnet or not. So far so good. What puzzles me is this , there is a term average magnetic flux or "azimuthal mean" , this term describes the average magnetic field through the area swept by the rotating Faraday...
Back
Top