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Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Hi there Jack!
Faraday disc generators are just another way of converting kinetic energy into electrical energy.
They were used in early synchrotron experiments because of their ability to generate millions of amps of DC at a few volts - if they be built on a grand scale that is!
As with much that looks simple at first sight, the devil is in the detail. Reliable ultra low resistance slip rings needed to take off low voltage at very high current are not easy to make, though few here would have any difficulty making a small demonstration model.
Registered Member #96
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 05:37PM
Location: CI, Earth
Posts: 4061
Ga-In alloy could work.
Hold it in place by mixing in a small quantity of iron particles (300 mesh) precoated with tin using electroless plating to prevent corrosion and it might work.
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Conundrum wrote ...
Ga-In alloy could work.
Hold it in place by mixing in a small quantity of iron particles (300 mesh) precoated with tin using electroless plating to prevent corrosion and it might work.
This 2 V limit is what has prevented them from finding a permanent niche in the generator firmament, though all sorts of patents have been issued for them in the past.
Disc generators might bounce back from obscurity should cheap room-temperature superconductivity ever become available. Who can say?
Registered Member #1526
Joined: Mon Jun 09 2008, 12:56AM
Location: UK
Posts: 216
Is it a fundamental limit? The back of this envelope is telling me that rpm and field strength determines the voltage. I realise that a couple of volts is probably the practical limit though.
Registered Member #3414
Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
Fraggle wrote ...
Is it a fundamental limit? The back of this envelope is telling me that rpm and field strength determines the voltage. I realise that a couple of volts is probably the practical limit though.
From Wikipedia:
"The voltage is typically low, on the order of a few volts in the case of small demonstration models, but large research generators can produce hundreds of volts"
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Fraggle wrote ...
Is it a fundamental limit? The back of this envelope is telling me that rpm and field strength determines the voltage. I realise that a couple of volts is probably the practical limit though.
The output voltage is proportional to the speed of rotation, so I should have said typically a few volts, or a low voltage, though if you are prepared to go the extra mile you can get 200V out of one, as this description of a proton synchrotron PSU built in the 1950s makes clear:
"The power supply is a large homopolar generator which has 4 steel disks each about 139" in diameter and 19 tons in mass. These, rotating at 900 r.p.m. in a magnetic field of 16000 gauss have an energy of 5 x 10E8 joules and develop an e.m.f. of 800V when in series."
Brush contacts "are made with liquid metal (sodium-potassium alloy) jets" .... "the gaps are chosen so "vertical forces are balanced within 40 tons" ... A 1000 kW motor generator is used as the primary power supply to turn the discs.
Source: Blamey JW The Orbital Magnet and Power Supply of the 10 GeV Proton Synchrotron At the Australian National University
which you can download in pdf from the Cern site here:
ah, maybe a capacitor is less complicated coil gun supply after all! I guess the advantage of the homopolar generator would be its ability to give off bursts rapidly (rapid fire).
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