What happens when a piece of iron is put into an inductor?

  • Thread starter Thread starter holacola
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Inductor Iron
AI Thread Summary
Inserting a piece of iron into a solenoid with a constant DC current affects the magnetic flux within the inductor. Iron is not diamagnetic; it is ferromagnetic, which significantly increases the magnetic field inside the coil due to its high permeability. This change in flux induces an opposing EMF according to Faraday's and Lenz's laws, leading to a temporary decrease in current as the iron is inserted. Once the iron is fully inserted, the current stabilizes back to its original value. Understanding the properties of iron and how they interact with magnetic fields is crucial for accurately predicting these effects.
holacola
Messages
5
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



You have a circuit with current I running through a solenoid. You insert a small piece of iron into the coil; what happens?

Homework Equations



d(Magnetic Flux)/dt = -EMF

The Attempt at a Solution



Iron is diamagnetic, so inserting it will decrease the magnetic field inside the inductor. Faraday's Law and Lenz's Law tell us that a changing flux induces an EMF to create a field opposing this change in flux. Therefore, my thought is that the current increases, then decreases back to its original value. Does that seem right?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
holacola said:

Homework Statement



You have a circuit with current I running through a solenoid. You insert a small piece of iron into the coil; what happens?

Homework Equations



d(Magnetic Flux)/dt = -EMF

The Attempt at a Solution



Iron is diamagnetic, so inserting it will decrease the magnetic field inside the inductor. Faraday's Law and Lenz's Law tell us that a changing flux induces an EMF to create a field opposing this change in flux. Therefore, my thought is that the current increases, then decreases back to its original value. Does that seem right?

Is iron diamagnetic?

ehild
 
I agree with ehild!
The answer to your question is no. What does Faraday say? Is flux affected if anything is added into the coil?
(Constant applied emf assumed).
 
So the answer should be nothing, since normal iron is non-magnetic?
 
This problem needs to be better defined. Is the current sinusoidal? DC? If sinusoidal, is it constant-voltage or constant-current drive? Part of a circuit with series resistance?

Iron is very magnetic. Ferro-magnetic. "Ferro" stands for "iron".
 
holacola said:
So the answer should be nothing, since normal iron is non-magnetic?

Where did you get the idea that iron is diamagnetic? You probably don't understand the difference between magnetic, ferromagnetic, diamagnetic, and paramagnetic.
 
The current is constant DC.

Ferromagnets are permanent magnets. This is named after iron, commonly a permanent magnet.

Diamagnetic materials, when placed inside a magnetic field, create an opposing field.

Paramagnetic materials create a parallel field.

Isn't this correct? I don't understand how we can answer the question, as written, however. If the iron were magnetized, we would need to know its orientation, in order to calculate the changing flux...

You are right that my understanding of this is lacking.
 
holacola said:
The current is constant DC.

Ferromagnets are permanent magnets. This is named after iron, commonly a permanent magnet.

Iron is not 'commonly' a permanent magnet, although basic iron can be permanently magnetized to some extent.

OK, so the current is constant DC. So obviously there is no change in current.

What about the flux thru the coil? Is it increased or decreased or stays constant when you shove the iron into the coil? Defend your answer (use Ampere's law).

Then use Faraday's law to determine if the voltage across the inductor changes.
 
If the iron is not permanently magnetized, it won't change the flux, and the current won't change. If it is permanently magnetized, the change in flux depends on its orientation. The current can do whatever as the flux changes, then return to its original value.
 
  • #10
holacola said:
If the iron is not permanently magnetized, it won't change the flux, and the current won't change. If it is permanently magnetized, the change in flux depends on its orientation. The current can do whatever as the flux changes, then return to its original value.

Afraid that's wrong.

First, permanent magnetization has nothing to do here. The iron is characterized by having high permeability, not magnetic retention.

Second, the flux changes greatly wih the entry of the ciron core into the inductor coil.

You just said the current is dc which means it's constant. If it isn't constant then you must describe the entire circuit.

You need to do a lot of revision of basic electricity and magnetism.
 
  • #11
Ahhhh. Ok. I think I understand. H is essentially B - M. We can use Ampere's Law to get H, and then add on M to get B, which will be much larger than it was before. From there, the result follows directly that the current decreases as the core is inserted, then returns to its original value.
 
Back
Top