Inductive reactance is a property exhibited by an inductor, and inductive reactance exists based on the fact that an electric current produces a magnetic field around it. In the context of an AC circuit (although this concept applies any time current is changing), this magnetic field is constantly changing as a result of current that oscillates back and forth. It is this change in magnetic field that induces another electric current to flow in the same wire called
counter-electromotive force (counter-EMF) in a direction such as to oppose the flow of the current originally responsible for producing the magnetic field (known as
Lenz's law). Hence,
inductive reactance is an opposition to the change of current through an element. For an ideal inductor in an AC circuit, the inhibitive effect on change in current flow results in a delay, or a phase shift, of the alternating current with respect to alternating voltage. Specifically, an ideal inductor (with no resistance) will cause the current to lag the voltage by a quarter cycle, or 90°. In electric power systems, inductive reactance (and capacitive reactance, however inductive reactance is more common) can limit the power capacity of an AC transmission line, because power is not completely transferred when voltage and current are out-of-phase (detailed above). That is, current will flow for an out-of-phase system, however real power at certain times will not be transferred, because there will be points during which instantaneous current is positive while instantaneous voltage is negative, or vice versa, implying negative power transfer. Hence, real work is not performed when power transfer is "negative". However, current still flows even when a system is out-of-phase, which causes transmission lines to heat up due to current flow. Consequently, transmission lines can only heat up so much (or else they would physically sag too much, due to the heat expanding the metal transmission lines), so transmission line operators have a "ceiling" on the amount of current that can flow through a given line, and excessive inductive reactance can limit the power capacity of a line. Power providers utilize capacitors to shift the phase and minimize the losses, based on usage patterns. Inductive reactance X_L is
proportional to the sinusoidal signal
frequency f and the
inductance , which depends on the physical shape of the inductor: X_L = \omega L = 2\pi f L. The average current flowing through an
inductance L in series with a
sinusoidal AC
voltage source of RMS
amplitude A and frequency f is equal to: I_L = {A \over \omega L} = {A \over 2\pi f L}. Because a
square wave has multiple amplitudes at sinusoidal
harmonics, the average current flowing through an
inductance L in series with a square wave AC voltage source of RMS
amplitude A and frequency f is equal to: I_L = {A \pi^2 \over 8 \omega L} = {A\pi \over 16 f L}, making it appear as if the inductive reactance to a square wave was about 19% smaller X_L = {16 \over \pi} f L than the reactance to the AC sine wave. Any conductor of finite dimensions has inductance; the inductance is made larger by the multiple turns in an
electromagnetic coil.
Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction gives the counter-
emf \mathcal{E} (voltage opposing current) due to a rate-of-change of
magnetic flux density \scriptstyle{B} through a current loop: \mathcal{E} = -{{d\Phi_B} \over dt}. For an inductor consisting of a coil with N loops this gives: \mathcal{E} = -N{d\Phi_B \over dt}. The counter-emf is the source of the opposition to current flow. A constant
direct current has a zero rate-of-change, and sees an inductor as a
short-circuit (it is typically made from a material with a low
resistivity). An
alternating current has a time-averaged rate-of-change that is proportional to frequency, this causes the increase in inductive reactance with frequency. == Impedance ==