How does an electrical damper work.

AI Thread Summary
An electrical damper reduces the amplitude of current or voltage in a circuit, often described in the context of RLC circuits, which consist of resistors, inductors, and capacitors. The damping effect can be categorized as underdamped, critically damped, or overdamped, depending on the values of these components. Energy loss occurs primarily through the resistor, leading to signal attenuation. Understanding the oscillation between the electric field of the capacitor and the magnetic field of the inductor is crucial for grasping how damping works. Basic knowledge of capacitance and impedance is helpful for comprehending these concepts.
rigger100472
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
I am trying to find out how an electrical damper works. I know that it slowly reduces the amplitude of a current or voltage but don't know how, or even what any circuit would look like. I am not an electrician but know basics like capacitence, impedence etc so if you can help and can explain in laymans terms I would be grateful.

Everything I have looked at on the web is very specific but I am just after the basic idea and maybe some applications.

Thank you
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
rigger100472 said:
I am trying to find out how an electrical damper works. I know that it slowly reduces the amplitude of a current or voltage but don't know how, or even what any circuit would look like. I am not an electrician but know basics like capacitence, impedence etc so if you can help and can explain in laymans terms I would be grateful.

Everything I have looked at on the web is very specific but I am just after the basic idea and maybe some applications.

Thank you


Do you mean electrical damping? For instance, a 2nd order system that can be underdamped, critically damped, or overdamped, based on the values of the resistor, capacitor, and inductor.
 
What UR_Correct said essentially. Google "RLC circuits". Current oscillates between an inductor and capacitor via a resistor. Physically this is an oscillation between an electric field(cap) and a magnetic field(inductor). The resistor is an energy loss resulting in signal attenuation (with the added smaller losses associated with the cap/inductor).
 
I Am asking about an electrical damper as UR_Correct has assumed.
 
Now I remember. RLC circuits are something I looked into once but didn't investigate their damping effect. Thanks everyone.:-)
 
Hey guys. I have a question related to electricity and alternating current. Say an alien fictional society developed electricity, and settled on a standard like 73V AC current at 46 Hz. How would appliances be designed, and what impact would the lower frequency and voltage have on transformers, wiring, TVs, computers, LEDs, motors, and heating, assuming the laws of physics and technology are the same as on Earth?
While I was rolling out a shielded cable, a though came to my mind - what happens to the current flow in the cable if there came a short between the wire and the shield in both ends of the cable? For simplicity, lets assume a 1-wire copper wire wrapped in an aluminum shield. The wire and the shield has the same cross section area. There are insulating material between them, and in both ends there is a short between them. My first thought, the total resistance of the cable would be reduced...
I used to be an HVAC technician. One time I had a service call in which there was no power to the thermostat. The thermostat did not have power because the fuse in the air handler was blown. The fuse in the air handler was blown because there was a low voltage short. The rubber coating on one of the thermostat wires was chewed off by a rodent. The exposed metal in the thermostat wire was touching the metal cabinet of the air handler. This was a low voltage short. This low voltage...
Back
Top