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Motor Effect

Contents

Key Stage 4

Meaning

The motor effect is the force on a current carrying wire in a magnetic field.

About The Motor Effect

When an a wire has an electrical current it has a magnetic field. If this wire is in the presence of an external magnetic field the two fields will interact causing a force.
The magnitude of the force depends upon:
The force on a current carrying wire is at right angles to both the current and the magnetic field.
Fleming's Left Hand Rule can be used to find the direction of the force.

\(\overrightarrow{B}\): First finger field.

\({I}\): Second finger current.

\(\overrightarrow{F}\): The force.

The direction on the force on this wire can be found using Fleming's Left Hand Rule.

Equation

Force = (Magnetic Flux Density) x (Current) x (Length)

\(F = BIl\)

Where

\(B\) = The Magnetic Flux Density (strength of magnetic field).

\(I\) = The Electrical Current through the wire.

\(l\) = The length of wire inside the magnetic field.

\(F\) = The force on the wire.

Example Calculations

A wire carrying a current of 2.3A is inside a 55mT magnetic field that extends along the wire by a length of 6.1cm. Calculate the force on the wire correct to two significant figures. 23cm of wire carrying 1.2A of current is contained in a 37mT magnetic field. Calculate the force on the wire correct to two significant figures.
1. State the known quantities in SI Units.

\(B\) = 55mT = 55x10-3T

\(I\) = 2.3A

\(l\) = 6.1cm = 6.1x10-2m

1. State the known quantities in SI Units.

\(B\) = 37mT = 37x10-3T

\(I\) = 1.2A

\(l\) = 23cm = 23x10-2m

2. Substitute the numbers into the equation and solve.

\(F = BIl\)

\(F = 55\times 10^{-3} \times 2.3 \times 6.1 \times 10^{-2}\)

\(F = 7.7165 \times 10^{-3}N\)

\(F \approx 7.7\times 10^{-3}N\)

2. Substitute the numbers into the equation and solve.

\(F = BIl\)

\(F = 37\times 10^{-3} \times 1.2 \times 23 \times 10^{-2}\)

\(F = 1.0212 \times 10^{-2}N\)

\(F \approx 1.0\times 10^{-2}N\)

References

AQA

Motor effect, page 228, GCSE Physics, Hodder, AQA
Motor effect, page 249, GCSE Physics; Student Book, Collins, AQA
Motor effect, pages 220-221, GCSE Physics; Third Edition, Oxford University Press, AQA
Motor effect, pages 221-227, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy; Physics, CGP, AQA
Motor effect, pages 281, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 2, Hodder, AQA
Motor effect, pages 295-302, GCSE Physics; The Complete 9-1 Course for AQA, CGP, AQA
Motor effect, pages 94, 95, GCSE Physics; The Revision Guide, CGP, AQA

Edexcel

Motor effect, page 172, GCSE Physics, Pearson Edexcel
Motor effect, page 197, GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
Motor effect, page 406, GCSE Combined Science, Pearson Edexcel
Motor effect, pages 273-278, GCSE Physics, CGP, Edexcel
Motor effect, pages 87, 88, GCSE Physics; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel