Electromagnetic induction and transformers - EdexcelTransformer power transfer

Electromagnetic induction can create a voltage by movement of a conductor in a magnetic field. This voltage can make current flow. Transformers use electromagnetic induction to change the voltage of alternating currents.

Part ofCombined ScienceElectromagnetic induction

Transformer power transfer

To calculate electrical use the equation:

power = potential difference × current

\(P = V I\)

This is when:

  • power (P) is measured in watts (W)
  • potential difference (V) is measured in volts (V)
  • current (I) is measured in amperes – also referred to as amps – (A)

Assuming that a is 100% efficient, the following equation can be used to calculate the power output from the transformer:

potential difference across primary coil × current in primary coil = potential difference across secondary coil × current in secondary coil

\(V_s \times I_s = V_p \times I_p\)

Example

A step-down transformer converts 11 500 V into 230 V. The power output is used to run a 2,000 W kettle. Calculate the current flowing in the primary coil.

From \(P = V I\), \(kettle~power = V_s \times I_s = 2,000~W\)

\(V_p \times I_p = V_s \times I_s\)

So \(V_p \times I_p = 2,000~W\)

\(I_p = 2,000 \div 11,500\)

input current, \(I_p = 0.174~A\)

High voltage power transmission

The carries electricity around Britain. The higher the current in a cable, the greater the energy transferred to the surroundings by heating. This means that high currents waste more energy than low currents.

To reduce energy transfers to the environment, the National Grid uses step-up transformers to increase the voltage from power stations to thousands of volts, which lowers the current in the transmission cables. Step-down transformers are then used to decrease the voltage from the transmission cables, so it is safer to distribute to homes and factories.