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Inductances AC vs DC
Posted 20 mars 2017, 09:51 UTC−4 Low-Frequency Electromagnetics, Modeling Tools & Definitions, Parameters, Variables, & Functions 1 Reply
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Hello everybody!
I've discovered that coil with iron core has different inductance values depending on a study type.
Stationary study produces higher inductance value compared to frequency domain one. Field distribution is also different. DC has more homogeneous magnetic field within iron core while AC has all the field concentrated in a thin surface layer.
So now I have 2 questions:
1. Which of the two inductances is the correct one?
2. As far as I know, maximum achievable magnetic field in iron core lies around 2 T. In AC model I got magnetic flux density up to 5 T within iron core. Since inductance is derived from total magnetic energy and that energy is calculated by integrating all those flux density values, does it mean that I'm getting incorrect inductance values as well?
I've discovered that coil with iron core has different inductance values depending on a study type.
Stationary study produces higher inductance value compared to frequency domain one. Field distribution is also different. DC has more homogeneous magnetic field within iron core while AC has all the field concentrated in a thin surface layer.
So now I have 2 questions:
1. Which of the two inductances is the correct one?
2. As far as I know, maximum achievable magnetic field in iron core lies around 2 T. In AC model I got magnetic flux density up to 5 T within iron core. Since inductance is derived from total magnetic energy and that energy is calculated by integrating all those flux density values, does it mean that I'm getting incorrect inductance values as well?
1 Reply Last Post 21 mars 2017, 03:29 UTC−4