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Paul Burridge wrote: You measure its reactance at 1 MHz using the formula X=2*pi*F and find it to be 6.28 ohms. At 2 MHz you find it to be 12.56 ohms. At 10 MHz you find it to be 62.8 ohms. So far the reactance is changing linearly with respect to frequency. (Actually it is not perfectly linear, but the difference at these frequencies is small and probably would not be observed with run of the mill test equipment.) But, as you approach 100 MHz, you find the change is obviously no longer linear. At 95 MHz you would expect the reactance to be 6.28*95=596.6 ohms, but much to your surprise, it measures 1000 ohms. At 99 MHz, instead of the expected 6.28*99=621.72 ohms, it measures 50,000 ohms!! All the above is perfectly normal and easily observable. My point is that when a coil measures 50,000 ohms at 99 MHz, its inductance HAS TO BE L=X/(2*pi*F), or 50,000/(6.28*99)=80.4 uH! This is not an illusion. If you have an inductance meter which uses 99 MHz as a test frequency, it WILL MEASURE 80.4 uH. And therefore, I maintain that inductance DOES vary with frequency. How can it be otherwise? As Spock said to Kirk, "You proceed from a false assumption." Or, to put it another way, the scenario you've just laid out contains an inherent contradiction. The inductance meter that you are using (or assuming) is not actually measuring inductance. It's measuring reactance, and back-calculating to what the inductance would be *if* it were measuring a "pure" inductance. However, as you recognize, the component that you are measuring is *not* a pure inductance. Its actual reactance is the result of interaction between its inductance, its inter-winding and distributed capacitance, and its winding resistance (at any given frequency). So, what you're observing can best be interpreted as follows: - At low frequencies (well below resonance), the component's reactance is dominated by its inductive component. It's a decent approximation of a "pure" inductance. The inductance meter gives accurate estimate of the inductive component. - At high frequencies (well above resonance), the component's reactance is dominated by its capacitive component. It becomes a decent approximation of a "pure" capacitance at some point, I suspect. At these frequencies, your simple inductance meter lies through its teeth. It "tells" you that the part's inductance is such-and- such, but it's not telling you the truth. It's hiding from you the fact that the reactance it's seeing isn't inductive at all (the reactance decreases as frequency goes up, and exhibits a capacitive phase angle). So, I think, what you're facing here is the problem which occurs when you try to force simplifying assumptions ("the component being measured is a pure inductance" and "an inductance meter actually measures inductance") outside the range in which these assumptions are valid. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
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