Voltage and Current in transformers

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Solution 1

There is a well known transformation law for the effective load seen through a transformer.

Let $R_o$ be the load in the output circuit.

$V_o = I_o R_o$

Assuming all power is transferred into the output circuit,

$V_o I_o = V_i I_i$

It then follows simply that

$V_i / I_i = (V_i / V_o)^2 R_o$

This is the effective load seen by the input circuit.

Solution 2

as pointed out by @Georg, $V=IR$ is a different thing and conservation of energy accross the transformers a different!!

you can validate the Ohm's Law $V=IR$ in case where you have current flowing through a resistive medium, which as a matter of fact applies everywhere expect the less abundant superconductors...

If you want to apply Ohm's law in transformer then you can do that provided you do that in primary and secondary independently since primary and secondary in a transformer is not electrically coupled rather they are magnetically connected. So applying Ohm's law between primary and secondary is not correct.

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In fact when you actually see the conservation of energy though primary and secondary you will notice that they are not balanced i.e. when current is halved, theoretically voltage should double; but practically this doesn't happen since resistance takes its share and reduces the voltage slightly below its expected value.

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Updated on January 29, 2020

Comments

  • one-more-minute
    one-more-minute almost 4 years

    In transformers, the ratio of the voltages equals the ratio of the turns - so double the output coil's turns and the output voltage doubles. Then, in order to conserve energy, current halves.

    This makes perfect sense in terms of $\mathrm{P=VI}$, but what happened to $\mathrm{V=IR}$? Doubling voltage and halving the current seems to completely contradict this basic law. That is, of course, unless the resistance in the output circuit changes, with R proportional to $\mathrm{V^2}$ - but I don't see how this is possible.

    So how can a transformer obey both laws? Can resistance change or am I missing something else?

    • Georg
      Georg about 12 years
      You miss that both laws are independent. The first (constancy of power/energy) has to be obeyed across the transformer, Ohms law has to be obeyed in both cicuits, primary and secondary independently. And simple transformers in textbooks are thought to be "ideal", no ohmic resistance in windings, no losses, no stray inductance.
    • one-more-minute
      one-more-minute about 12 years
      I think you've missed my point slightly. The theory may not be exact experimentally, but it must be close or it would be worthless. Theory does say that, in the output circuit, I α 1/V, which seems to contradict I=V/R. This is what I was getting at, and what is answered below.
    • BlueRaja - Danny Pflughoeft
      BlueRaja - Danny Pflughoeft over 9 years
      I wrote a blog post about this a few years ago: blueraja.com/blog/194/do-transformers-obey-ohms-law
    • Mahathi Vempati
      Mahathi Vempati over 7 years
      @BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft , I read your blog, and it was amazing. I want to make sure I got it: In a step up transformer, since the number of coils in secondary is more than primary, the inductive reactance is more, and hence, as voltage increases, current decreases. Is that right? Also, if you have the time, can you answer this: physics.stackexchange.com/q/235551/93868 , a similar question, but slightly more intuitive. Thanks a lot!
    • Always Confused
      Always Confused over 7 years
  • Alan Rominger
    Alan Rominger about 12 years
    It took me a bit, but I think this answers the question. I don't know why it was downvoted. The questioner sees how $VI$ is kept constant for both sides of the transformer, but doesn't see how $V^2/R$ is. The answer is that $R$ is different for the two sides, as detailed (correctly I think) here.
  • Martin Gales
    Martin Gales about 12 years
    Yes, this is a correct answer.+1
  • one-more-minute
    one-more-minute about 12 years
    I asked how it was possible for resistance to change, and if my understanding is correct, user1631 is saying that the transformer itself acts as a source of resistance. Plus, this confirms that the load is proportional to the voltage squared as I suspected. Accepted and +1'd, thanks