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Building Design and Construction Handbook - Merritt - Ventech!

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15.3 ALTERNATING-CURRENT SYSTEMS<br />

ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS 15.5<br />

Any change in flow of current, such as that which occurs in alternating current,<br />

produces a magnetic field around the wire. With steady flow, as in direct current,<br />

there is no magnetic field.<br />

One common application of magnetic fields is for solenoids. These are coils of<br />

wire, with many turns, around a hollow cylinder in which an iron pin moves in the<br />

direction of the magnetic field generated by the current in the coil. The movement<br />

of the pin is used to open or close electric switches, which start <strong>and</strong> stop motors,<br />

or open <strong>and</strong> close valves. The pin returns to a normal position, either by gravity<br />

or spring action, when the current in the coil is stopped.<br />

The motion of the pin can be predicted by the right-h<strong>and</strong> rule. If the fingers of<br />

the right h<strong>and</strong> are curled around the solenoid with the fingers pointing in the same<br />

direction as the current in the coil, the thumb will point in the direction of the<br />

magnetic field, or the direction in which the pin will move.<br />

With direct current, a magnetic field exists only as the flow changes from zero<br />

to steady flow. Once steady flow is established in the wire, the magnetic field<br />

collapses. For this reason, all devices <strong>and</strong> machines that rely on the interaction of<br />

current <strong>and</strong> magnetic fields must use alternating current, which changes continuously.<br />

This equipment includes transformers, motors, <strong>and</strong> generators.<br />

Transformers. These are devices used to change voltages. A transformer comprises<br />

two separate coils, primary <strong>and</strong> secondary, that wind concentrically around<br />

a common core of iron (Fig. 15.2). A<br />

common magnetic field consequently<br />

cuts both the primary <strong>and</strong> secondary<br />

windings. When alternating current (ac)<br />

flows in the primary coil, the changing<br />

magnetic field induces current in the<br />

secondary coil. The voltage resulting in<br />

each winding is proportional to the<br />

FIGURE 15.2 Transformer.<br />

number of turns of wire in each coil. For<br />

example, a transformer with twice the<br />

number of turns in the secondary coil as in the primary will have a voltage across<br />

the secondary coil equal to twice the primary voltage.<br />

AC Generators <strong>and</strong> Motors. Just as changes in current flowing in a wire produce<br />

a magnetic field, movement of a wire through a magnetic field produces current in<br />

the wire. This is the principle on which electric motors <strong>and</strong> generators are built.<br />

In these machines, a rotating shaft carries wire coils wound around an iron core,<br />

called an armature. A stationary frame, called the stator, encircling the armature,<br />

also carries iron cores around which are wound coils of wire. These cores are<br />

arranged in pairs opposite each other around the stator, to serve as poles of magnets.<br />

The windings are so arranged that if a north pole is produced in one core a south<br />

pole is produced in the opposite core. Current flowing in the stator, or field, coils<br />

create a magnetic field across the rotating armature.<br />

There are two basic types of motors <strong>and</strong> generators, synchronous <strong>and</strong> induction.<br />

In a synchronous machine, the armature has a separate magnetic field produced by<br />

a direct current exciter that interacts with the magnetic field of the stator. In an<br />

induction machine, the magnetic field in the armature is induced by movement past<br />

the stator field.

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