How Do You Calculate Mutual Inductance in Toroidal Solenoids?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the mutual inductance of two toroidal solenoids wound on top of each other, with given parameters such as mean radius r, cross-sectional area A, and number of turns N1 and N2. The initial formula proposed for mutual inductance is M = μ0⋅N1⋅N2⋅A, but participants note the need to incorporate the length of the coils, which is represented by l. It is clarified that for toroidal solenoids, the length l can be expressed as 2πr, linking it directly to the mean radius. The conversation emphasizes the importance of expressing the final answer in terms of the provided variables. The participants successfully arrive at the correct formulation for mutual inductance.
HelpPlease27
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Homework Statement


A toroidal solenoid with mean radius r and cross-sectional area A is wound uniformly with N1 turns. A second toroidal solenoid with N2 turns is wound uniformly on top of the first, so that the two solenoids have the same cross-sectional area and mean radius.
What is the mutual inductance of the two solenoids? Assume that the magnetic field of the first solenoid is uniform across the cross section of the two solenoids.
Express your answer in terms of the variables N1, N2, A, r, magnetic constant μ0 and others appropriate constants.

Homework Equations




The Attempt at a Solution


M = μ0⋅N1⋅N2⋅A this is what I have so far and I know that I need to include the r in the equation somewhere but not really sure where or why. Could somebody please explain. Thank you.
 
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Hi,

Could you show your work ? There seems to be a dimension missing in your M
 
BvU said:
Hi,

Could you show your work ? There seems to be a dimension missing in your M

I just used the equation $$M = u_0*A*N_1*N_2/l$$ So I assume its the l I'm missing but how does it correspond to r
 

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HelpPlease27 said:
I just used the equation $$M = u_0*A*N_1*N_2/l$$ So I assume its the l I'm missing but how does it correspond to r
If the coils were linear then l would be the length of the coils, right? If that length were bent into a circle...
 
gneill said:
If the coils were linear then l would be the length of the coils, right? If that length were bent into a circle...

I'm not sure
 
Check these coursenotes ( ©2004 Sen-ben Liao, Peter Dourmashkin, and John Belcher, MIT)
In particular (11.2.6) and (11.2.12) . If you confirm for yourself they are equivalent, M follows from (11.2.14)
 
HelpPlease27 said:
I'm not sure
If you take a line of length L and bend it to form a circle, can you find the radius of that circle?
 
gneill said:
If you take a line of length L and bend it to form a circle, can you find the radius of that circle?

Is l not the length of the coil with the turns already in it?
 
HelpPlease27 said:
Is l not the length of the coil with the turns already in it?
You're not given the length, you're given the radius r. Your answer should be put in terms of the given variables.
 
  • #10
gneill said:
You're not given the length, you're given the radius r. Your answer should be put in terms of the given variables.

Yes, so I need to convert l into r
 
  • #11
HelpPlease27 said:
Yes, so I need to convert l into r
Yes.
 
  • #12
gneill said:
Yes.

I don't know how to
 
  • #13
If you take a circle of radius r and cut it at one point and straighten it out into a line segment, how long is that line segment?
 
  • #14
gneill said:
If you take a circle of radius r and cut it at one point and straighten it out into a line segment, how long is that line segment?

2*pi*r
 
  • #15
HelpPlease27 said:
2*pi*r
Yes!
 
  • #16
So l = 2*pi*r
 
  • #17
HelpPlease27 said:
So l = 2*pi*r
Yes.
 
  • #18
gneill said:
Yes.

Thank you, got it now
 
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