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Published byGrace Small Modified over 9 years ago
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Inductance and Inductive Reactance Inductance - the characteristic of an electrical ckt that oppose any change in current Symbol is “L” measured in a Henry (H) Inductors – Coils, inductors, reactors or chokes
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Faraday’s Law n States that the induced voltage depends on: u the number of turns in the coil, u The strength of the magnetic field u How fast the conductor cuts across the magnetic field
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Lenz’s Law
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Inductance n All ckts have conductors n Has its greatest impact when there is a change in current n Does not oppose current only the change in current n AC ckt current always changes do to the sine wave
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Coil Inductance n Four factors u Number of turns in the coil u Diameter of the coil and length u Type of material u Number of layers of the windings
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Power Loss in an Inductor n Copper losses uI2RuI2R n Iron – core inductors u Hysteresis loss u Eddy-current loss
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Transformer Action n Mutual Inductance
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Inductive Reactance n the reactance of an inductor is called inductive reactance. In other words, an inductors resistance in an AC circuit is called Inductive Reactance
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Inductive Reactance Reactance (x) is expressed in Ohms and Ohms law applies to inductive reactive circuits Inductive Reactance represented by X L n Depends on: F Frequency usually 60 hz F Inductance of the coil (H) - henry
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Inductive Reactance n As a Formula u X L = 2пfL F X L = inductive reactance Ω F П = 3.14 F f = Frequency in Hz F L = inductance in henrys
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Voltage, Current and Inductance n Ohms Law
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Sine Wave Pure Resistance
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Sine Wave With Reactance
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Phase Diagram
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Power in an Inductive Circuit n Purely resistive n Inductive Reactance n Vars (Q) – volt amps of reactance n VA (S)- Volt amps n Power (P) – Power of load
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