Thanks, calculating with the atomic ratio seems indeed promising.
But: "A dissolved gas in a solid is part of the solid, there is no remnant of the gas properties left."
So the solution of liquid iron and dissolved nitrogen would form just liquid Iron nitride (FeN)? Is then the higher electric...
IRstuff, the primary goal is to aproximately estimate the increase of the specific resistivity of a metal in the liquid phase when a certain amount of a gas is dissolved in the liquid metal. The electric insulation strength of a gas is given by its low density, independent of its mass...
I am investigating the application of gases dissolved in liquid metals for increasing the electrical resistivity of a liquid metal-gas solution.
Many data on the solubility of gases are often specified in weight percentages, (wt%). For example, the solubility of nitrogen in liquid iron at...
Eddy currents are induced in a nonferromagnetic piece of metal conductor, e.g. aluminium or copper, when it is placed next to a conductor with high frequency AC. A magnetic field opposite to the 1. field is produced in the metal, ("mirroring"), therefore producing a repulsive force, which in...
If you look at the simulation with a closer view (see the new attachment below) you can see that in the force display mode the white arrows are always ponting towards the center of the hollow conductor (you preferably open the image in full resolution to see the arrows).
Despite the obvious...
sreid, the grafic simulation shows a force acting on the inner conductor (http://www.falstad.com/emwave2/index.html). All I know is that the force is either repelling or attracting, depending on the current flow direction, and that the force vectors are always concentric or excentric...
Yes,there will be no field inside the hollow conductor, except the field generated by the inner conductor. Actually, what I'm interested is to calculate the magnitude of the forces acting on the inner wire.
The attached screenshot shows the absence of magnetic field within the hollow wire on...
Does anyone know a way to calculate the magnetic field acting on a wire, when this wire is placed in the center of a bigger hollow wire?
I have the outer and inner diameter of the hollow wire, the diameter of the wire in the center (this two values define the radial distance between the...
Yes, fluctuations of the voltage are very common. Additionally, halogen bulbs are sometimes produced to run underdriven to increase their lifetime, but at the price of reduced brightness and color temperature.
Therefore exact values of power consumption will be easier to measure than to...
dpc, let's assume that the lamp would be a low voltage halogen bulb, e.g. ratet at 60W and 12V, and that this rate corresponds to the voltage and current in the active state (including the losses by the increased resistance of the tungsten filament when heated).
I don't understand much of...
Just to be sure on the units:
Watts = I²·r·D
I=5 (amps)
r=0.01724 (mm²·ohm/m)
D=10 (meters)
=5²·0.01724·10
=4.31 Watts
Or do I have to adapt the effective diameter aerea (0.5mm·pi=0.785mm²) for the r value?
Thanks. I assume the result will be in units of watts per second. Since I need to compare to the energy consumption of the original device in Watts (e.g. 60W), how to convert the watts per second to watts?
I'm looking for a way to calculate the additional energy consumption of an electrical device, if the same current used for the device has to run through a wire with a given length, diameter and resistance, before reaching the device.
As an example, take a lamp with an energy consumption of...