How Strong is the Magnetic Field Inside a Toroid?

AI Thread Summary
To determine the magnetic field inside a toroid, the formula B = (μ*N*I)/(2*π*R) is used, where μ is the permeability of free space, N is the number of windings, and I is the current. The challenge lies in calculating N, which requires knowing how many times the wire can wrap around the toroid's circumference. The circumference of the toroid's cross-section is calculated as π times the diameter, leading to the realization that only the circumference is needed, not the area. Clarification from peers helped resolve confusion about the necessity of the area in calculations. Understanding these concepts is crucial for accurately determining the magnetic field strength.
hellogirl88
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You are going to wrap a toroid with 273 m of copper wire that can carry a current of I = 1.7 A. The toroid has radius R = 16 cm and cross sectional diameter D = 1.2 cm. How large a magnetic field (T) can you make at the average toroidal radius?

I have been using the formula B = (\mu*N*I)/2*\pi*R
where \mu = 4\pi*10^-7, N = number of windings of the coil, and I is the current...I have no idea how to figure out N though. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
 
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You know how long the wire is and the size of the toroid. How many turns can you make with that much wire?
 
well L = 272m, and I am given R and the cross sectional diameter, and I know I need to combine those to get the size of the toroid, but I don't know how to combine them. I've attached a picture that associated with the problem.
 

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Hint: What's the circumference of the toroid cross-section?
 
Well, circumference = diameter time pi, so would the cross sectional circumference = pi * 1.2cm ? Even so, I am still really confused how to incorporate that into finding the total area of the circle. I understand I should essentially be thinking of the toroid as an inner circle and outer circle, but I can visualize how to incorporate both into the total area...
 
hellogirl88 said:
Well, circumference = diameter time pi, so would the cross sectional circumference = pi * 1.2cm ?
Good. So how many times can you wrap the wire around that circumference?
Even so, I am still really confused how to incorporate that into finding the total area of the circle.
You don't need the area of the circle, just the circumference.
 
Thank you so so much! It makes much more sense to me now. Another student in my class explained it in a way that implied needing the area of the circles, which is what confused me. Thanks again
 
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