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| Tags: attraction, electromagnets, force |
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#1
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Hi everybody! Speaking about industrial electromagnets, like this one:
http://www.coolmagnetman.com/images/em500a.jpg ¿Is an electromagnet like this, strong for attract nearby ferromagnetic objects? ¿How closer they need to be to get attracted strongly? or ¿are they strong just for holding ferromagnetic objects? (particulary, at the webpage where shows this electromagnet, they say that it can hold 500 lb just using a 1,5 v "D" size cell, so it´s obvious that this class of electromagnets are too good for holding ferromagnetic objects; what i need to know is how good are the to attract and how strong they attract nearby objects) |
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#2
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"Camilo" wrote in message ... Hi everybody! Speaking about industrial electromagnets, like this one: http://www.coolmagnetman.com/images/em500a.jpg ¿Is an electromagnet like this, strong for attract nearby ferromagnetic objects? ¿How closer they need to be to get attracted strongly? or ¿are they strong just for holding ferromagnetic objects? (particulary, at the webpage where shows this electromagnet, they say that it can hold 500 lb just using a 1,5 v "D" size cell, so it´s obvious that this class of electromagnets are too good for holding ferromagnetic objects; what i need to know is how good are the to attract and how strong they attract nearby objects) The attractive force depends on the ampere turns in the winding, the cross-section and length of the air gap and the geometry of the magnet and gap. Ignoring the iron, for a total air gap length g and area A, with N turns and current I, the force is (mu0/2 )N^2I^2A/g^2. In the magnet shown, there are two air gaps, preferrably of the same area. (use 2g instead of g) muo is the permeability of free space and fringing of flux is ignored. This is not valid at a gap very near 0 as the iron will limit the flux. You can then use force =1/2 BHA where B is the maximum flux density with no gap. Then B is determined by H=NI/L where L is the iron path length and B is generally found from a B-H curve for the material rather than using B=muH because u is so variable. -- Don Kelly remove the X to answer |
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#3
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Ok, but in the practice, leaving aside formulas; on an industrial
electromagnet which have all the design conditions to be strong, ¿is it only strong to hold, or is strong to attract too? |
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#4
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On Jul 7, 2:42 am, Camilo wrote:
Ok, but in the practice, leaving aside formulas; on an industrial electromagnet which have all the design conditions to be strong, ¿is it only strong to hold, or is strong to attract too? In short, a magnet attracts iron based upon the rate of change with distance of the magnetic flux flowing through the magnet and attracted piece. As you move a piece of iron away from a magnet, the air gap that appears acts like a "resistance" to the magnetic "circuit". This means that as the air gap is increased, the magnetic flux flowing through the magnet and lifting piece "magnetic circuit" is greatly reduced. The greater the distance the greater the reduction. Therefore Electromagnets tend to hold items with a LOT of force when the gap is small or nearly zero, but do not "attract" items from a distance very well. It is possible to adjust these things but as a general rule that is true. Just go find any magnet and stick a piece of iron to it. Clomped on to the magnet it will stick with lots of force. But at some distance the force of attraction will be much less. |
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#5
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"Electromagnets tend to hold items with a LOT of force when the gap is small or nearly zero, but do not "attract" items from a distance very well. " ahhh... that´s what I was thinking about, just I wasn´t too sure, so thanks my friend for your answer!! |
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#6
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"Camilo" wrote in message ... Ok, but in the practice, leaving aside formulas; on an industrial electromagnet which have all the design conditions to be strong, ¿is it only strong to hold, or is strong to attract too? The holding strength is the important issue. It is the maximum attractive force possible. The objective is to bring the magnet into contact with the load and then lift it mechanically. A magnet of the design that you showed is designed to hold at zero gap. -- P.S. I have just read Benj's comments- and they are excellent. Don Kelly remove the X to answer |
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#7
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No, a battery is /not/ a complex 1,5 voltage.
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