Friday, July 31, 2009

What is the best way to measure/understand/design coil and inductance devices?

I was in a surplus shop with all kinds of inductors, coils, chokes, transformers, etc The variety of these devices is amazing.





How are these devices designed? How are they measured?


How do the turns/radius/core determine the inductance?





They are such basic devices, but I have never seen a standard multimeter capable of measuring it. Why?





Just curious how I would know how to measure and design them from scratch?





Thanks for any creative answers.

What is the best way to measure/understand/design coil and inductance devices?
Inductor come in a large variety of forms, depending on their inductance value, current ratings, and applications. They all consist of coils of wire basically, and these coils can be wound around air cores, iron cores, ferrite cores. Some inductors have cores that can be moved in and out of the coil to vary the inductance. RLC meters measure inductance with an AC signal; some mulimeters measure the current rise with time with a constant applied voltage. There are also impedance bridges which match the inductance to reference components. The basic unit of inductance is the Henry. A current rise of 1 ampere per second with an applied constant voltage of 1 volt represents an inductance of 1 Henry. One Henry is a very large inductance, with most inductors valued in the microhenry or millihenry range.





To design inductors there are formulas involving coil diameter, number of turns, and permeability of the core. For more information see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductor
Reply:They make RLC meters that measure all 3 value at once. You could make an RL circuit and use a voltage input and output to determine the inductance value. Not totally sure how they are designed. You would have to look at the equations for them. I think you can buy a kit to make them.





I have not used inductors to much and I am an electrical engineering student. You can actually make a pseudo inductor using an op-amp.

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