Importance of Current density?

AI Thread Summary
Current density is preferred over total current in many electrical engineering applications because it provides a localized understanding of current flow per unit area, which is essential for analyzing complex systems. It allows for the examination of how current behaves in specific regions, particularly in materials where the distribution of current is not uniform. Current density is a vector quantity, while total current is a scalar, making it more suitable for differential equations like Maxwell's equations that describe electromagnetic phenomena. This localized approach is crucial for solving problems involving varying current distributions, such as eddy currents. Understanding both current and current density is important, as each serves its purpose depending on the context of the analysis.
Rajeswar Panja
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Why we do use electrical current density in place of total electrical current? Actually I want to know what is the advantage of using electrical current density?
 
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Yes, I read on wiki article but my question is that why we do use current density which means current/unit area rather than the total current?
 
Rajeswar Panja said:
why we do use current density
We don't always use Current Density. In fact, in many years of EE, Current Density hasn't figured very highly in any of my work. Talk to a power Engineer and you may get a different answer.
What is the context of your question?
 
Rajeswar Panja said:
why we do use current density which means current/unit area rather than the total current?
We use whichever one we need for a given problem
 
Current density is a vector, current is a scalar?
 
Current density is a local property (For a point), whereas current is a global property (e.g. for an entire wire). Both are useful depending on the problem but I guess I'll talk a bit more about current density. Densities in general are useful because they allow you to look at the effect of complicated distributions of the quantity in question (e.g. current,charge,mass) by adding up all the little current densities (Numerically or otherwise), current density allows you to find for instance the magnetic field inside a complicated material where only parts of the current have an effect. Another motivation for using densities is that the differential forms of equations, (e.g. Maxwell equations) are more mathematically convenient to work with, and they have to be expressed in terms of local properties.

Both current and current density are vectors i.e. they both have direction but currents are rarely written in vector form probably because they're written too often and it's assumed obvious
 
cosmik debris said:
Current density is a vector, current is a scalar?
Mgcini Keith Phuthi said:
Both current and current density are vectors
Current is in fact a scalar. The current through a surface S (e.g. a cross-section of a wire) is defined as $$I = \iint_S \vec J \cdot d\vec S$$ where ##\vec J## is the current density at each point on the surface and ##d \vec S## is the infinitesimal surface element at that point.
 
Perhaps an example would help: You can't make any progress on eddy currents without solving for the spatially varying current density.
 
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