An eddy current brake consists of a conductive piece of metal, either a straight bar or a disk, which moves through the magnetic field of a magnet, either a
permanent magnet or an
electromagnet. When it moves past the stationary
magnet, the magnet exerts a
drag force on the metal which opposes its motion, due to circular
electric currents called
eddy currents induced in the metal by the
magnetic field. Note that the conductive sheet [?] is not made of
ferromagnetic metal such as iron or steel; usually copper or aluminum are used, which are not attracted to a magnet. The brake does not work by the simple attraction of a ferromagnetic metal to the magnet. See the diagram at right. It shows a metal sheet
(C) moving to the right under a magnet. The magnetic field
(B, green arrows) of the magnet's north pole
N passes down through the sheet. Since the metal is moving, the
magnetic flux through the sheet is changing. At the part of the sheet under the leading edge of the magnet
(left side) the magnetic field through the sheet is increasing as it gets nearer the magnet. From
Faraday's law of induction, this field induces a counterclockwise flow of electric current
(I, red), in the sheet. This is the eddy current. In contrast, at the trailing edge of the magnet
(right side) the magnetic field through the sheet is decreasing, inducing a clockwise eddy current in the sheet. Another way to understand the action is to see that the free
charge carriers (
electrons) in the metal sheet are moving to the right, so the magnetic field exerts a sideways force on them due to the
Lorentz force. Since the velocity
v of the charges is to the right and the magnetic field
B is directed down, from the
right hand rule the Lorentz force on positive charges
qv×
B is toward the rear in the diagram (to the left when facing in the direction of motion of the sheet) This causes a current
I toward the rear under the magnet, which circles around through parts of the sheet outside the magnetic field in two currents, clockwise to the right and counterclockwise to the left, to the front of the magnet again. The mobile
charge carriers in the metal, the
electrons, actually have a negative charge, so their motion is opposite in direction to the
conventional current shown. As described by
Ampere's circuital law, each of these circular currents creates a counter magnetic field (
blue arrows), which in accordance with
Lenz's law opposes the change in magnetic field, causing a drag force on the sheet which is the braking force exerted by the brake. At the leading edge of the magnet
(left side) by the
right hand rule the counterclockwise current creates a magnetic field pointed up, opposing the magnet's field, causing a repulsive force between the sheet and the leading edge of the magnet. In contrast, at the trailing edge
(right side), the clockwise current causes a magnetic field pointed down, in the same direction as the magnet's field, creating an attractive force between the sheet and the trailing edge of the magnet. Both of these forces oppose the motion of the sheet. The
kinetic energy which is consumed overcoming this drag force is dissipated as heat by the currents flowing through the
resistance of the metal, so the metal gets warm under the magnet. The braking force of an eddy current brake is exactly proportional to the velocity
V, so it acts similar to
viscous friction in a liquid. The braking force decreases as the velocity decreases. When the conductive sheet is stationary, the magnetic field through each part of it is constant, not changing with time, so no eddy currents are induced, and there is no force between the magnet and the conductor. Thus an eddy current brake has no holding force. Eddy current brakes come in two geometries: • In a
linear eddy current brake, the conductive piece is a straight rail or track that the magnet moves along. • In a
circular,
disk or
rotary eddy current brake, the conductor is a flat disk rotor that turns between the poles of the magnet. The physical working principle is the same for both. ==Disk eddy current brakes==