Inductor and Transformer Design
1    Introduction
The conditioning of power flow in Power Electronic Systems (PES) is done through the use of elec-
tromagnetic elements (inductors and transformers). In this section the basics of electromagnetics is
reviewed. They are formulated in such a way as to be useful for the design of inductors and transformers.
2    Electromagnetics
The voltage across and the current through a conducting element is related through Ohm’s lam. This
law may be stated as follows. When an electric field (of intensity  V/m) is set up across a conducting
material (of conductivity σ 1/Ω-m), there is an average flow of electrical charges across the conducting
material (of current density J A/m). This is shown in Fig. 1.
                                                Figure 1
                                                 J = σ
When expressed in terms of element voltage and current, this reduces to the familiar ststement of
Ohm’s law.
                                         I = V/R ; R = l/σA
   In comparison with conducting material, the property of magnetic material may be stated as follows.
   When a magnetic field (of intensity H A/m) is set up, across a magnetic material (of permeability
µ H/m) a magnetic flux (of density B T/m2 ) is established in the magnetic material, as shown in Fig.
2.
                                                B = µH
The above equation, in terms of magnetomotive force (mmf = F) and the flux (Φ) in the magnetic
circuit, reduces to
                                                   1
                                                 Figure 2
                        Φ = F/R ; R = Reluctance of the magnetic circuit l/Aµ
The above relationship is analogous to Ohm’s law for magnetic circuits. The magnetic permebility µ of
any magnetic material is usually expressed relative to the permeability of free space (µo = 4π × 10−7
H/m).
                                               R = l/Aµo µr
   Electromagnetic circuit elements consists of an electric circuit and a magnetic circuit coupled to
each other . The electric current in the electric circuit sets up the magnetic field in the magnetic circuit
with resultant magnetic flux. Seen as an electric circuit element, the electromagnetic element possesses
the property of energy storage without dissipation.
   Ampere’s law and Faraday’s law relate the electric and magnetic circuits of the electromagnetic
element. Ampere’s law states that the mmf in a magnetic circuit is equal to the electric current
enclosed by the magnetic circuit. For example, for the electromagnetic circuits shown in Figs 3
and 4, the magnetic circuit mmf’s are I and NI respectively. With further assumption that the
magnetic material is isotropic and homogenous and that the magnetic flux distribution is uniform.
             Figure 3                                                       Figure 4
   Using Ampere’s law, we may relate the magnetic flux in the magnetic circuit as
                                         Φ = (Σ I)/R = NI/R
                                                     2
The above equation may conveniently be put in the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 5. Faraday’s law
relates the voltage induced in an electric circuit that is coupled to a magnetic circuit.
                                                Figure 5
                                    v = N dΦ/dt = (N2 /R) dΨ/dt
The quantity N2 /R is defined as the inductance of the electric circuit.
                                              v = L di/dt
Thus an electromagnetic circuit provides us an electric circuit element (inductor). The voltage across
an inductor is directly proportional to the rate of rise of current through it. The energy stored in the
magnetic circuit is
                                   Li2 /2 = F2 /2R = Φ2 R/2 = φF/2
The equivalent circuit of an inductor showing both its electric and magnetic parts may be conveniently
represented as shown in Fig. 6.
                                                Figure 6
    However in practice, the inductor will have certain parasitic resistance (of the wire in the electric
circuit) and magnetic leakage (in the magnetic circuit). These non-idealities may be conveniently be
incorporated in the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 7.
    The design of an inductor involves the design of the electrical (No. of turns and the wire size) and
the magnetic (geometry of the magnetic core and its required magnetic property) circuit.
                                                   3
                                                  Figure 7
3      Design of Inductor
The inductor consists of a magnetic circuit and a electrical circuit. The design requires,
    1. The size of wire too be used for the electric circuit, to carry the rated current safely.
    2. The size and shape of the magnetic core to be used such that
        (a) The peak flux is carried safely by the core without saturation.
       (b) The required size of the conductors are safely accommodated in the core.
    3. The number of turns of the electric circuit to obtain the desired inductance.
4      Material constraints
Any given wire (conducting material) can only carry a certain maximum current per unit cross section
of the wire size. When this limit is exceeded, the wire will overheat from the heat generated (I2 R) and
melt or deteriorate. The safe current density for the conducting material is denoted by J A/m2 .
    Any magnetic material can only carry a certain maximum flux density. When this limit is exceeded,
the material saturates and the relative permeability µr drops substantially. This maximum allowable
flux density for the magnetic material is denoted by Bm T/m2 .
    In order to design an inductor of L Henry, capable of carrying an rms current of Irms and peak
current of Ip ,
                               Let the wire size be aw m2 : aw = Irms /J
                    Let the peak flux density in the core of area (Ac ) be Bm Wb/m2
                                           LIp = NΦp = NAc Bm                                        (1)
   The winding is accommodated in the window of the core. Let the window area (Aw ) be filled by
conductors to a fraction of kw
                                         kw Aw = Naw = NIrms /J                                      (2)
    From (1) and (2)
                                       LIp NIrms /J = NAc Bm kw Aw ;
                                        LIp Irms /J = kw JBm Ac Aw
                                                      4
    Energy handling capacity is proportional to the area product (Ac × Aw ) of the core.
    • kw depends on how well the winding can be accommodated in the window of the core. kw is
      usually 0.3 to 0.5.
    • Bm is the maximum unsaturated flux density for the core material. Bm iss about 1 Wb/m2 for
      iron and 0.2 Wb/m2 for ferrites.
    • J is the maximum allowable current density for the conductor. For copper conductors J is between
      2×106 A/m2 to 5×106 A/m2 .
5      Design steps
                          Input : L, Ip , Irms , Wire tables, core tables, J, Bm , kw
    1. Compute Ac Aw = LIp Irms /kw JBm
    2. Select a core from the core tables with the required Ac Aw .
    3. For the selected core, find Ac , Aw .
    4. Compute N = LIp /Bm Ac . Select nearest whole number of N∗ .
    5. Compute aw = Irms /J. Select next higher a∗w from wire tables.
    6. Compute lg = µo N∗ Ip /Bm .
    7. Check for assumptions :
        (a) Ri  Rg : li /µr  lg
                              √
        (b) No fringing : lg  Ac
    8. Recalculate J∗ = Irms /a∗w .
    9. Recalculate K∗w = Aw /N∗ a∗w .
10. Compute from the geometry of the core, mean length per turn and the length of winding. From
    wire tables find the resistance of winding.
                                                      5
Nominal    Gauge    Overall    Resistance   Area of bare
diameter   number   diameter   at 20◦ C     conductor
mm         SWG      mm         Ω/Km         mm2
0.025      50       0.036      34026        0.0005067
0.030      49       0.041      23629        0.0007297
0.041      48       0.051      13291        0.001297
0.051      47       0.064      8507         0.002027
0.061      46       0.074      5907         0.002919
0.071      45       0.086      4340         0.003973
0.081      44       0.097      3323         0.005189
0.091      43       0.109      2626         0.006567
0.102      42       0.119      2127         0.008107
0.112      41       0.132      1758         0.009810
0.122      40       0.142      1477         0.011675
0.132      39       0.152      1258         0.013701
0.152      38       0.175      945.2        0.018242
0.173      37       0.198      735.9        0.02343
0.193      36       0.218      589.1        0.02927
0.213      35       0.241      482.2        0.03575
0.234      34       0.264      402          0.04289
0.254      33       0.287      340.3        0.05067
0.274      32       0.307      291.7        0.05910
0.295      31       0.330      252.9        0.06818
0.315      30       0.351      221.3        0.07791
0.345      29       0.384      183.97       0.09372
0.376      28       0.417      155.34       0.1110
0.417      27       0.462      126.51       0.1363
0.457      26       0.505      105.02       0.1642
0.508      25       0.561      85.07        0.2027
0.559      24       0.612      70.3         0.2452
0.610      23       0.665      59.07        0.2919
0.711      22       0.770      43.40        0.3973
0.813      21       0.874      33.23        0.5189
                         6
                    Nominal    Gauge        Overall       Resistance   Area of bare
                    diameter   number       diameter      at 20◦ C     conductor
                    mm         SWG          mm            Ω/Km         mm2
                    0.914      20           0.978         26.26        0.6567
                    1.106      19           1.082         21.27        0.8107
                    1.219      18           1.293         14.768       1.167
                    1.422      17           1.01          10.85        1.589
                    1.626      16           1.709         8.307        2.075
                    1.829      15           1.920         6.654        2.627
                    2.032      14           2.129         5.317        3.243
                    2.337      13           2.441         4.020        4.289
                    2.642      12           2.756         3.146        5.480
                    2.946      11           3.068         2.529        6.818
                    3.251      10           3.383         2.077        8.302
                    3.658      9            3.800         1.640        10.51
                    4.064      8            40219         1.329        12.97
6     Transformer
Unlike that inductor, the transformer consists of more than one winding. Also, in order to keep the
magnetisation current low, the transformer does not have airgap in its magnetising circuit.
   Consider a transformer with single primary and single secondary as shown in Fig. 8. Let the
                                               Figure 8
specifications be
                               Primary = V1 volts ; I1 amps ;
                               Secondary = V2 volts ; I2 amps ;
                               VA        = VA voltamps = V1 I1 = V2 I2
                               Frequency = f Hz .
    For square wave of operation, the voltage of the transformer is
                                                   7
                                                 Figure 9
                                 V1 = 4fBm Ac N1 ; V2 = 4fBm Ac N2
   The window of the transformer accommodates both the primary and the secondary. With the same
notation as for inductors,
                                       kw Aw = (N1 I1 + N2 I2 )/J ;
                                  N1 I1 = N2 I2 ( because V1 I1 = V2 I2 )
                                  N1 I1 = kw Aw J/2; N2 I2 = kw Aw J/2;
    From the above equations,
                                    V1 I1 + V2 I2 = 4kw JBm fAw Ac ;
                                          VA = 2kw JBm fAw Ac ;
7     Transformer design
For a given specification of VA, V1 , V2 , J, B, kw and f, it is desired to design a suitable transformer.
The design requires
    1. Size of the wire and number of turns to be used for primary and secondary windings.
                                                    8
    2. Core to be used.
    3. Resistance of the winding.
    4. Magnetising inductance of the transformer.
8     Design steps
    1. Compute the Area product of the desired core.
       Ac Aw = VA/(2fkw JBm )
    2. Select the smallest core from the core tables having an area product higher than obtained in step
       (1).
    3. Find the core area (Ac ) and window area (Aw ) of the selected core.
    4. Compute the number of turns.
       N1 = V1 /4fBm Ac ; N2 = V2 /4fBm Ac
    5. Select the nearest higher whole number to that obtained in step (4), for the primary & secondary
       turns.
    6. Compute the wire size required for secondary & primary.
       aw1 = I1 /J ; aw2 = I2 /J
    7. Select from the wire tables the desired wire size.
    8. Compute the length of secondary & primary turns, from the mean length per turn of the core
       tables.
    9. Find from the wire tables , the primary & secondary resistance.
 10. Compute from the core details, the reluctance (R) of the core.
 11. Compute the magnetising inductance.
     Lm = N2 /R
9     Problems
Design the following inductors and transformers. Use the wire and core tables given in the class. Make
suitable assumptions. Assume suitable values for J, Bm , kw , etc.
    1. An inductor of 2 mH, capable of carrying a current of 3 A dc.
    2. An inductor of 2 mH, capable of carrying a current of 3 A ac, at 50 Hz.
    3. A 50 VA transformer operating at 15 KHz, square wave with primary and secondary voltages of
       20 & 40 V respectively.
    4. Fig. 8 shows a forward converter. It employs a transformer with with three windings. Required
       data and the voltage and current waveforms of the transformer windings are shown. Make a
       design of this transformer.
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