circuitcellar.com
Magazine Support   Digital Library   Products & Services   Suppliers Directory 
 
 





 
Test Your EQ #151— Answer

Answer 5
Believe it or not, yes it can.

An induction motor has no electrical connections to the rotor; instead, a magnetic field is induced into the rotor by the stator. The motor runs slightly slower than "synchronous" speed — typically 1725 or 3450 rpm when at 60-Hz power.

If the motor is provided with a capacitive load, driven at slightly higher than synchronous speed (1875 or 3750 rpm), and has enough residual magnetism in the rotor to get itself going, it will generate power up to approximately its rating as a motor. The reactive current of the load capacitors keeps the rotor energized in much the same way as when it is operating as a motor.

See http://www.qsl.net/ns8o/Induction_Generator.html for additional details.

Contributor: Dave Tweed

Published February 2003

   

E-mail eq@circuitcellar.com with questions or comments.

Back to Questions