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Electrical Generator/Dynamo


An electrical generator is a device that produces electrical energy from a mechanical energy source. The process is known as electricity generation.

Developments

Before the connection between magnetism and electricity was discovered, generators used electrostatic principles. The Wimshurst machine used electrostatic induction or "influence". The Van de Graaff generator uses either of two mechanisms:

  • Charge transferred from a high-voltage electrode

  • Charge created by the triboelectric effect using the separation of two insulators (the belt leaving the lower pulley)

    Electrostatic generators are inefficient and are useful only for scientific experiments requiring high voltages.

    Faraday

    In 1831-1832 Michael Faraday discovered that a potential difference is generated between the ends of an electrical conductor that moves perpendicular to a magnetic field. He built the first electromagnetic generator based on this effect, using a copper disc rotating between the poles of a horseshoe magnet. It produced a small direct current.

    Dynamo

    The dynamo was the first electrical generator capable of delivering power for industry, and is still the most important generator in use in the 21st century. The dynamo uses electromagnetic principles to convert mechanical rotation into an alternating electric current.

    The first dynamo based on Faraday's principles was built in 1832 by Hippolyte Pixii, a French instrument maker. It used a permanent magnet which was rotated by a crank. The spinning magnet was positioned so that its north and south poles passed by a piece of iron wrapped with wire. Pixii found that the spinning magnet produced a pulse of current in the wire each time a pole passed the coil. Furthermore, the north and south poles of the magnet induced currents in opposite directions. By adding a commutator, Pixii was able to convert the alternating current to direct current.

    Gramme Dynamo

    However, both of these designs suffered from a similar problem: they induced "spikes" of current followed by none at all. Antonio Pacinotti, an Italian scientist, fixed this by replacing the spinning coil with a toroidal one, which he created by wrapping an iron ring. This meant that some part of the coil was continually passing by the magnets, smoothing out the current. Zénobe Gramme reinvented this design a few years later when designing the first commercial power plants, in Paris in the 1870s. His design is now known as the Gramme dynamo. Various versions and improvements have been made since then, but the basic concept of a spinning endless loop of wire remains at the heart of all modern dynamos.

    Concepts

    It is important to understand that the generator creates an electric current, but does not create electric charge, which is already present in the conductive wire of its windings. It is somewhat analogous to a water pump, which creates a flow of water but does not create the water itself.

    Other types of electrical generator exist, based on other electrical phenomena such as piezoelectricity, and magnetohydrodynamics. The construction of a dynamo is similar to that of an electric motor, and all common types of dynamos could work as motors. Also, all common types of electric motors could work as generators.

    The Generator rotor is turned by a device termed a Prime mover, often by a Diesel engine, Steam turbine, Water turbine or Gas turbine coupled to the rotor shaft.

    Patents
    • U.S. Patent 222,881 - Magneto-Electric Machines : Thomas Edison's main continous current dynamo. The device's nickname was the "long-legged Mary-Ann". This device has large bipolar magnets. It is inefficient.
    • U.S. Patent 373,584 - Dynamo-Electric Machine : Edison's improved dynamo which includes an extra coil and ultilizes a field of force.
    • U.S. Patent 359,748 - Dynamo Electric Machine - Nikola Tesla's construction of the alternating current induction motor / generator.
    • U.S. Patent 406,968 - Dynamo Electric Machine - Tesla's "Unipolar" machine (i.e., a disk or cylindrical conductor is mounted in between magnetic poles adapted to produce a uniform magnetic field).
    • U.S. Patent 417,794 - Armature for Electric Machines -Tesla's construction principles of the armature for electrical generators and motors. (Related to patents numbers US327797, US292077, and GB9013.)
    • U.S. Patent 447,920 - Method of Operating Arc-Lamps - Tesla's alternating current generator of high frequency alerations (or pulsations) above the auditory level.
    • U.S. Patent 447,921 - Alternating Electric Current Generator - Tesla's generator that produces alterations of 15000 per second or more.

    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Electrical Generator"





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