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24 December, 11:34

You're an electrical engineer designing an alternator (the generator that charges a car's battery). Mechanical engineers specify a 10-cm-diameter rotating coil, and you determine that you can fit 250 turns in this coil. To charge a 12-V battery, you need a peak output of 14 V when the alternator is rotating at 1200 rpm. What do you specify for the alternator's magnetic field? Wolfson, Richard. Essential University Physics, Volume 2 (p. 542). Pearson Education. Kindle Edition.

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  1. 24 December, 13:03
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    I will specify a value of 0.009T for the alternator's magnetic field

    Explanation:

    E_peak = 14 V

    d = 10cm = 0.1m, so r = 0.1/2 = 0.05m

    N = 250 turns

    f = 1200rpm = (1200rp/m x 1m/60sec) = 20 revolutions per second

    At peak performance, peak voltage is given by the equation;

    E_peak = NABω

    Let's make the magnetic field B the subject;

    B = E_peak / (NAω)

    Now we know that ω = 2πf

    Thus, ω = 2π x 20 revs/s = 125.664 revs/s.

    Let's convert it to the standard unit which is rad/s.

    1 rev/s = 6.283 rad/s

    Thus, 125.664 revs/s = 125.664 x 6.283 = 789.55 rad/s

    Area (A) = πr² = π x 0.05² = 0.007854 m²

    Thus, plugging in the relevant values to get;

    B = 14/[ (250 x 0.007854 x 789.55) ] = 0.009T
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