Reducing Eddy Current Effects: How Laminated Cores and Reduced Area Help

AI Thread Summary
Laminated cores reduce eddy currents by limiting the area available for these currents to circulate, as the orientation of the laminations prevents large conductive paths. The thickness of the laminations is primarily related to utilizing the mass effectively rather than solely for eddy current reduction. The speed at which electric and magnetic fields penetrate the insulation between laminations is slow, influenced by skin effects on the conductive surfaces. Selecting lamination thickness depends on the operational frequency, while orientation is crucial for minimizing eddy currents. Understanding these principles is essential for effective design in magnetic applications.
jayeshtrivedi
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Dear All,
How laminated core helps in reduction of the eddy current?
How reduction of area is useful in reduction of eddy current?
Thanks.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Magnetic laminations must be oriented so that conductive material does not act as a large area electrical short circuited turn. The sectional area of lamination penetrated by magnetic field decides the voltage available to drive eddy the currents.

The thickness of laminations is more to do with utilising all the mass of the lamination than with eddy current reduction. The electric and magnetic fields propagate through the insulation between laminations at close to the speed of light. Skin effects on the surface of conductive laminations limit the rate of penetration of the magnetic field. This speed of penetration is very slow and so is measured in metres per second. The thickness of laminations must therefore be selected depending on the frequency of operation, while the orientation of laminations is selected to minimise eddy currents.
 
Hi,

I think am unable to understand the reply, could you please explain in details.

Thanks.

Jayesh Trivedi
 
Think about drawing circles inside a rectangle without going outside the line. If I have a fairly large rectangle then I can draw some big circles. If I squish the rectangle so that it's more like a plate then I can only draw small circles.

When magnetic fields change in time they cause the electric field to curl up. If this happens in a large conductive mass then there will be a large circular current called the eddy current. If you chop that mass up into plates then their won't be as much room for the current to spin around in each individual plate so the eddy currents will be smaller.
 
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