How Does An Induction Motor Work?

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An induction motor works by using electromagnets to create a rotating magnetic field. This field then induces an electric current in the rotor, which creates its own magnetic field. The interaction between the two fields causes the rotor to turn, effectively rotating around the motor.

Today, we flick a switch and get instant power, but our ancestors would have considered that a miracle. We know that it runs because it’s powered by a motor, but it’s still incredibly impressive! On that note, you can find motors in all forms of devices and machinery that move. Have you ever thought about how many electric motors are in the room you’re sitting in right now? Well, two for starters—one in your hard drive and another in your cooling fan. In your house, you’ll find additional motors in hair dryers and many toys; in the bathroom, they’re in extractor fans and electric shavers, and in the kitchen, motors are in just about every appliance you can name, from washing machines and dishwashers to coffee grinders, microwaves, and electric can openers. Electric motors have proven themselves to be among the greatest inventions of all time. Now, let’s pull some apart and find out how they work!


The Theory Behind Motors

An electric motor works on a very simple principle. If you pass electricity to one end of the motor axle, it rotates at the other end, which provides the power to drive a machine. One might wonder at this junction—how did this electricity lead to the movement? To understand this phenomena mechanism, let’s take an ordinary wire and then loop and lay it between the poles of two permanent magnets. If you connect the ends of the loop to a battery, you will see that the wire will momentarily jump. This might sound perplexing, but it’s based on a very fundamental scientific principle. This phenomenon occurs because, when the electric current passes through the wire, a momentary magnetic field is generated around the wire. When this momentary magnetic field is produced, it interacts with the magnetic fields of the permanent magnet. And as we know, one of two things occur when two magnetic fields are generated—they either attract or repel. This is what makes the wire jump.

left hand rule
(Photo Credit : Alistokes /Wikimedia Commons)

To go a step further, we can even predict the motion of the conductor (in the above case, the wire). This can be done by the Fleming Left Hand Rule (also known as the motor rule). To use this rule, stick out your thumb, index and middle fingers in such a way that each of the fingers is perpendicular to one another. Each finger signifies a particular force. The index finger indicates the direction of the magnetic field of the permanent magnets. The middle finger stands for the direction of the flow of the current in the conductor.

Also Read: What Is Lenz’s Law And Why Is It True?

Design Of An Induction Motor

Motors of all kinds are based on the same basic principles, the only difference in an induction motor being that the wire is bent into a rectangular form. A common occurrence that might occur in the wire is that it would move ninety degrees and then flip the wire back to its original position. This is not acceptable when we require constant rotations in a particular direction, but this can be overcome with the help of the commutator. The primary job of the commutator is to flip the current every time the wire rotates ninety degrees, which ensures that the wire keeps rotating in the same direction.

induction motor
(Photo Credit : Zureks/Wikimedia Commons)

Until now, we’ve seen the primary design of the DC motor. An induction motor, on the other hand, has a slightly different design than a DC motor. When it comes to an AC motor, there’s a ring of electromagnets arranged around the outside, known as the stator, which is designed to produce a rotating magnetic field. Inside the stator, there’s a solid metal axle, a loop of wire, a coil, a squirrel cage made of metal bars and interconnections (like the rotating cages people sometimes get for their hamsters), or some other freely rotating metal element that can conduct electricity. Unlike in a DC motor, where you send power to the inner rotor, in an AC motor, you send power to the outer coils that make up the stator. The coils are energized in pairs, in sequence, producing a magnetic field that rotates around the outside of the motor.

Also Read: What Are Inductors And What Is Induction?

Working Of An Induction Motor

One might wonder how a rotating magnetic field manages to cause the wire to rotate. We must remember that the rotor—suspended inside the magnetic field—is an electrical conductor. The magnetic field is constantly changing (because it’s rotating), so according to the laws of electromagnetism (Faraday’s law, to be precise), the magnetic field produces (or induces, to use Faraday’s term) an electric current inside the rotor. If the conductor is a ring or a wire, the current flows around it in a loop. If the conductor is simply a solid piece of metal, eddy currents swirl around it instead. Either way, the induced current produces its magnetic field and, according to another law of electromagnetism (Lenz’s law), tries to stop whatever it is that causes it—the rotating magnetic field—by rotating as well. You can think of the rotor frantically trying to “catch up” with the rotating magnetic field to eliminate the difference in motion between them. Electromagnetic induction is the key to why a motor like this spins, which is why it’s called an induction motor.

Asynchronmotor_animation, induction motor
(Photo Credit : Burns/Wikimedia Commons)

There are two pairs of electromagnet coils present in the motor, which is energized in turn by an AC supply. The two red coils are wired in series and energized together. Since it’s an AC motor, the current in each coil doesn’t switch on and off abruptly, but instead rises and falls smoothly in the shape of a sine wave. As the coils are energized, the magnetic field they produce between them induces an electric current in the rotor. This current produces its own magnetic field, which tries to oppose the thing that caused it (the magnetic field from the outer coils). The interaction between the two fields causes the rotor to turn, effectively rotating around the motor. The rotating magnetic field makes the rotor spin in the same direction and (in theory) at nearly the same speed. And that, dear reader, is how an induction motor gets the job done!

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References (click to expand)
  1. Induction motor - Wikipedia. Wikipedia
  2. Induction Motor: How Does it Work? (Basics & Types). electrical4u.com
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About the Author

Venkatesh is an Electrical and Electronics Engineer from SRM Institute of Science and Technology, India. He is deeply fascinated by Robotics and Artificial Intelligence. He is also a chess aficionado, He likes studying chess classics from the 1800 and 1900’s. He enjoys writing about science and technology as he finds the intricacies which come with each topic fascinating.

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