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To understand how an inductor can work in a circuit, this figure is helpful:
What you see here is a battery, a light bulb, a coil of wire around a piece of iron (yellow) and a switch. The coil of wire is an inductor. If you have read How Electromagnets Work, you might recognize that the inductor is an electromagnet.
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Now you try to start the
water flowing. The paddle wheel will tend to prevent the water from
flowing until it has come up to speed with the water. If you then try
to stop the flow of water in the channel, the spinning water wheel will
try to keep the water moving until its speed of rotation slows back
down to the speed of the water. An inductor is doing the same thing
with the flow of electrons in a wire -- an inductor resists a change in the flow of electrons. |
The light bulb is a resistor (the resistance creates heat to make the filament in the bulb glow -- see How Light Bulbs Work for details). The wire in the coil has much lower resistance (it's just wire), so what you would expect when you turn on the switch is for the bulb to glow very dimly. Most of the current should follow the low-resistance path through the loop. What happens instead is that when you close the switch, the bulb burns brightly and then gets dimmer. When you open the switch, the bulb burns very brightly and then quickly goes out.
The reason for this strange behavior is the inductor. When
current first starts flowing in the coil, the coil wants to build up a magnetic field.
While the field is building, the coil inhibits the flow of current.
Once the field is built, current can flow normally through the wire.
When the switch gets opened, the magnetic field around the coil keeps
current flowing in the coil until the field collapses. This current
keeps the bulb lit for a period of time even though the switch is open.
In other words, an inductor can store energy in its magnetic field, and an inductor tends to resist any change in the amount of current flowing through it.
The standard unit of inductance is the henry. The equation for calculating the number of henries in an inductor is:
The area and length of the coil are in meters. The term mu is the permeability of the core. Air has a permeability of 1, while steel might have a permeability of 2,000.
Now you park a car over the coil and check the inductance again. The inductance will be much larger because of the large steel object positioned in the loop's magnetic field. The car parked over the coil is acting like the core of the inductor, and its presence changes the inductance of the coil. Most traffic light sensors use the loop in this way. The sensor constantly tests the inductance of the loop in the road, and when the inductance rises it knows there is a car waiting!
Usually you use a much smaller coil. One big use of inductors is to team them up with capacitors to create oscillators. See How Oscillators Work for details.