Magnetism & Electromagnetism

Electromagnetic Induction

Specific Learning Outcomes:

  • 6.15 Know that a voltage is induced in a conductor or a coil when it moves through a magnetic field or when a magnetic field changes through it, and describe the factors that affect the size of the induced voltage.
  • 6.16 Describe the generation of electricity by the rotation of a magnet within a coil of wire and of a coil of wire within a magnetic field, and describe the factors that affect the size of the induced voltage.

Electromagnetic induction is the process where a voltage (and potentially a current, if there's a complete circuit) is generated in an electrical conductor. This occurs when the conductor is placed in a changing magnetic field, or when the conductor moves through a magnetic field.

Key Principles

1. Changing Magnetic Field: A voltage is induced in a coil if the magnetic field passing through the coil changes. This can be achieved by:

2. Relative Motion: A voltage is induced in a conductor when it moves relative to a magnetic field so that it "cuts" through the magnetic field lines.

Faraday's Law:  EMF = −N × ΔΦ / Δt   |   The induced voltage equals the rate of change of magnetic flux through the coil times the number of turns.

Interactive Simulation: Faraday's Experiment

Drag the magnet left & right to move it through the coil. Watch the galvanometer and the EMF graph respond in real time.

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Notice: The faster you move the magnet, the larger the induced voltage. When the magnet is stationary, the EMF drops to zero because there is no change in magnetic flux.

Factors Affecting the Induced Voltage

The magnitude of the induced voltage depends on several factors (KLO 6.15 & 6.16):

Interactive Simulation: EMF Factor Explorer

Adjust each factor to see how it affects the peak EMF of a generator. The formula is Peak EMF = N × B × A × ω

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Generation of Electricity (KLO 6.16)

Electromagnetic induction is the core principle behind all electric generators. Electricity is generated by:

This process generates an alternating voltage (AC), because the direction of flux change reverses periodically as the coil (or magnet) rotates.

Generator EMF:  EMF(t) = N B A ω sin(ωt)   |   Peak EMF = N B A ω

Interactive Simulation: AC Generator

Watch the coil rotate between magnetic poles. The graph below shows the alternating voltage output in real time.

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Observe how the voltage follows a sine wave. When the coil is edge-on to the field (cutting the most field lines per second), the voltage is at its peak. When the coil is face-on (momentarily not cutting any new lines), the voltage passes through zero.

Real-World Applications

Applications of Electromagnetic Induction:

  • Electric Generators: Convert mechanical energy (from turbines powered by steam, water, or wind) into electrical energy.
  • Transformers: Change AC voltages up or down for efficient power transmission. A changing magnetic field in one coil induces a voltage in a neighbouring coil.
  • Induction Cooktops: Generate changing magnetic fields that induce electric currents directly in the base of metallic cookware, heating it.
  • Dynamic Microphones: Sound waves vibrate a diaphragm attached to a coil near a magnet. The coil's movement induces a voltage representing the sound.
  • Contactless Payment / RFID: A reader emits a magnetic field that induces a current in the card's antenna, powering it for data exchange.
  • Alternators in Cars: Generate electricity to charge the battery and power electrical systems while the engine runs.

Knowledge Check

1. What is essential for a voltage to be induced in a conductor (KLO 6.15)?

2. Which action will NOT typically induce a significant voltage in a coil?

3. Which factor would increase the induced voltage when a magnet rotates within a coil (KLO 6.16)?

4. Generating electricity by rotating a coil in a magnetic field (KLO 6.16) is a direct application of:

5. If a coil is rotated steadily within a uniform magnetic field, what type of voltage is induced?