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MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

Department of Physics

8.02 Spring 2003

XI. Inductance - Worked Examples

Example 1: Solenoid

A long solenoid with length l and a radius R consists of N turns of wire, as shown in the
figure below.

(a) Neglecting the end effects, find the self-inductance.

(b) A current I is passed through the coil. Find the energy stored in the system.

Solution:

(a) Using Amperes law, the magnetic field inside a solenoid is

0 NI
B= = 0 nI (1.1)
l

where n is the number of turns per unit length. The magnetic flux through each turn is

B = BA = 0 nI ( R 2 ) = 0 nI R 2 (1.2)

Thus, the self-inductance is


NB
L= = 0 n 2 R 2l (1.3)
I

(b) The energy of the system is given by

1 2 1 1 B2
( 0 nI ) ( R 2l ) =
2
UB = LI = 0 n 2 I 2 R 2l = ( R 2l ) (1.4)
2 2 20 20

Since R 2l corresponds to the volume of the solenoid, uB = B 2 / 2 0 represents the


magnetic energy density.

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Example 2: Toroid

A toroid consists of N turns and has a rectangular cross section, with inner radius a, outer
radius b and height h (see figure).

(a) Find its self-inductance L.

(b) Find the total magnetic energy stored in the toroid.

Solution:

(a) To find the self-inductance, we first need to know the magnetic field everywhere.
From symmetry consideration, the magnetic field inside the toroid must be circular, i.e.,
along the azimuthal direction. Therefore, in applying Amperes law, we choose the
integration path to be a circle of radius r.

This gives
G G
v d s = B(2 r ) = 0 I enc = 0 NI
B (2.1)
or

0 NI
B= (2.2)
2 r

The magnetic flux through one turn of the toroid may be obtained by integrating over the
rectangular cross section, with dA = hdr as the differential area element:

G G b NI 0 NIh b
B = B dA = 0 hdr = 2 ln a (2.3)
a
2 r

The total flux is N B . Therefore, the self-inductance is

2
N B 0 N 2 h b
L= = ln (2.4)
I 2 a

(b) The energy density of the magnetic field is

1 B 2 0 N 2 I 2
uB = = (2.5)
2 0 8 2 r 2

The total energy stored in the magnetic field can be found by integrating over the volume.
We choose the differential volume element to be a ring with radius r, width dr and height
h, i.e., dV = 2 rhdr . This yields

b N I N 2 I 2h b
2 2
U B = u B dV = 0 2 2 2 rhdr = 0 ln (2.6)
a
8 r 4 a

1 2
Since U B = LI , the self-inductance may also be obtained as
2

2U B 0 N 2 h b
L= = ln (2.7)
I2 2 a

which agrees with the result obtained in part (a).

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Example 3: Magnetic energy density

A wire of nonmagnetic material with radius R and length l carries a current I which is
uniformly distributed over its cross-section. What is the magnetic energy per unit length
inside the wire?

Solution:

Applying the Amperes law, the magnetic field at distance r R can be obtained as:

I
B ( 2 r ) = 0 J ( r 2 ) = 0 2
( r 2 ) (3.1)
R

which yields
0 Ir
B= (3.2)
2 R 2

Since the magnetic energy density (energy per unit volume) is given by

B2
uB = (3.3)
20

the total energy stored in the system becomes

R B2 I 2l R 0 I 2l R 4
U = ( 2 rl dr ) = 0 4 r 3 dr = (3.4)
0 2 0 4 R 0 4 R 4 4

Thus, the magnetic energy per unit length is equal to

0 I 2
UB / l = (3.5)
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Example 4: Mutual inductance

An infinite straight wire carrying current I is placed above a rectangular loop of wire with
width w and length L, as shown in the figure below.

Determine the mutual inductance of the system.

Solution:

To calculate the mutual inductance M, we first need to know the magnetic flux through
the rectangular loop. The magnetic field at a distance r away from the straight wire is
B = 0 I / 2 r , using Amperes law. The total magnetic flux B through the loop can be
obtained by summing over contributions from all differential area elements dA =L dr:

G G IL h + w dr 0 IL h + w
B = d B = B dA = 0 = ln (4.1)
2 h r 2 h

Thus, the mutual inductance is

B 0 L h + w
M= = ln (4.2)
I 2 h

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Example 5: Mutual inductance

A long solenoid with length l and a radius R consists of N1 turns of wire. If an insulated
coil of N2 turns is wrapped around it, calculate the mutual inductance, assuming that all
the flux from the solenoid passes through coil 2.

Solution:

The magnetic flux through each turn of the second coil due to the solenoid is

0 NI1
21 = BA = A (5.1)
l

where B = 0 NI1 / l is the uniform magnetic field inside the solenoid. Thus, the mutual
inductance is

N 2 21 0 N1 N 2 A
M= = (5.2)
I1 l

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Example 6: RL circuit

Consider the circuit shown in the figure below.

Determine the current through each resistor

(a) immediately after the switch is closed

(b) a long time after the switch is closed.

Suppose the switch is reopened a long time after its been closed, what is each current

(c) right after it is opened?

(d) after a long time?

Solution:

(a) Immediately after the switch is closed, the current


through the inductor is zero due to the induced emf.
Therefore, I 3 = 0 . Since I1 = I 2 + I 3 , we have I1 = I 2

Applying Kirchhoffs rules to the first loop yields


I1 = I 2 = (6.1)
R1 + R2

(b) After the switch has been closed for a long time, there is no induced emf in the
inductor and the currents will be constant. Kirchhoffs loop (voltage) rule gives

I1 R1 I 2 R2 = 0 (6.2)
for the first loop, and

I 2 R2 I 3 R3 = 0 (6.3)

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for the second. Combining the two equations with the junction rule I1 = I 2 + I 3 , we obtain

I1 =
( R2 + R3 )
R1 R2 + R1 R3 + R2 R3

R3
I2 = (6.4)
R1 R2 + R1 R3 + R2 R3

R2
I3 =
R1 R2 + R1 R3 + R2 R3

(c) Immediately after the switch is opened, the current through R1 is zero, i.e., I1 = 0 .
This implies that I 2 + I 3 = 0 . On the other hand, loop 2 now forms a decaying RL circuit
and I3 starts to decrease. Thus,

R2
I3 = I 2 = (6.5)
R1 R2 + R1 R3 + R2 R3

(d) A long time after the switch has been closed, all currents will be zero, i.e.,
I1 = I 2 = I 3 = 0 .

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Example 7: RL circuit

In the circuit shown below, suppose the circuit is initially open. At time t = 0 it is thrown
closed. What is the current in the inductor at a later time t.

Solution:

Let the currents through R1 , R2 and L be I1 , I 2 and I , respectively. From the Kirchhoffs
junction rule, we have I1 = I 2 + I . Applying the Kirchhoffs voltage rule to the left loop
yields

( I + I 2 ) R1 I 2 R2 = 0 (7.1)

Similarly, for the outer loop, we have

dI
( I + I 2 ) R1 = L (7.2)
dt

The two equations can be combined to give

dI
I 2 R2 = L (7.3)
dt

which implies
L dI
I2 = (7.4)
R2 dt

Substituting into the first equation the above expression for I 2 , we obtain

L dI dI
I + R1 L = 0 (7.5)
R2 dt dt

which can be simplified to be

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R1 + R2 dI
IR1 L = 0 (7.6)
R2 dt

Dividing the equation by ( R1 + R2 ) / R2 leads to

dI
' IR ' L =0 (7.7)
dt

where

R1 R2 R2
R' = , '= (7.8)
R1 + R2 R1 + R2

The differential equation can be solved and the solution is given by

'
I (t ) =
R'
(1 e R 't / L
) (7.9)
Since
' R2 /( R1 + R2 )
= = (7.10)
R' R1 R2 /( R1 + R2 ) R1

the current through the inductor may be rewritten as


I (t ) =
R1
(1 e R 't / L
) (7.11)

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Example 8: LC circuit

Consider the circuit below. Suppose the switch which has been connected to point a for a
long time is suddenly thrown to b at t = 0.

Find the following:

(a) the frequency of oscillation of the LC circuit.

(b) the maximum charge that appears on the capacitor.

(c) the maximum current in the inductor.

(d) total energy the circuit possesses at any time t?

Solution:

(a) The (angular) frequency of oscillation of the LC circuit is given by


= 2 f = 1/ LC . Therefore, the frequency is

1
f = (8.1)
2 LC

(b) The maximum charge stored in the capacitor before the switch is thrown to b is

Q = C (8.2)

(c) The energy stored in the capacitor before the switch is thrown is

1
U C = C 2 (8.3)
2

On the other hand, the magnetic energy stored in the inductor is

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1 2
UB = LI (8.4)
2

Thus, when the current is at its maximum, all the energy originally stored in the capacitor
is now in the inductor:

1 2 1 2
C = LI max (8.5)
2 2

This implies

C
I max = (8.6)
L

(d) At any time, the total energy in the circuit would be equal to the initial energy that the
capacitance stored, that is

1
U = U C + U B = C 2 (8.7)
2

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