The Discovery of Electricity and Magnetism and the Generation of
Electricity.
In the early 19th century the following similarity between two charged
particles and two magnets was observed:
- both created "forces" that could operate in a vacuum
- charge had a positive and negative component; magnets had a north
and south pole force could then be either attractive or repulsive.
- both the magnetic force and the electrostatic force strength
decreased as 1/R2
In 1820 Oersted did this experiment:
and discovered that an electric current creates
a magnetic field
Similarly, a coil of wire with a current passing through it generates
a magnetic field. This is known as an
electromagnet or solenoid .
So now we know that a current can create a magnetic field. If a
magnetic field can create a current then we have a means of generating
electricity. Experiments showed that a magnetic just sitting next
to a wire produced no current flow through that wire. However,
if the magnet is moving a current is
induced in the wire. The faster the
magnet moves, the greater the induced current.
This is the principal behind simple electric generators in which
a wire loop is rotated between to stationary magnetics. This produces
a continuously varying voltage which in turn produces an
alternating current .
Diagram of a simple electric generator:
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In this position there is no current flow but their
is a large potential difference (a large voltage) |
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In this position the Voltage is now zero and the
current flow is at a maximum |
To generate electricty then, all we really want to do is have some (mechanical)
mechanism turn a crank that rotates a loop of wire between stationary
magnets. The faster we can get this crank turned, the more current
we can generate.
This is still the way that we generate electricity today which is the reason why electricity generators are large and weigh a lot.
Copper wire is heavy and magnetic material is even heavier.
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