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Re: Skin Effect Re: [TCML] Q,,question



David N. Van Doren wrote:
I believe that ac current seeks the path of least magnetic field encircling it.
For tubes and solid conductors that is the outer most skin.
For coax with a return current in the center conductor,
it's the inside of the outer conductor, because of field cancellations.
from the inner return current.
Terman argues that in a flat strip the max current is at the outer
edges leaving the middle less current dense. how ever I've
read arguments to the contrary.
I think that Terman is correct, and the other distributions that you mention too. I am uncomfortable with what I wrote in the last post, about the magnetic field being null inside the tube being the cause of no current at the inner surface. This doesn't work at DC. And also, it's known that if a wire is passed trough
the interior of a tube carrying AC current, a voltage is induced on it.
Skin effect can probably be analyzed by decomposing a conductor in a number of parallel filamental conductors, all with identical resistances and inductances per unit of length, but mutual inductances among them determined by the distances between each pair of filaments. The whole circuit can then be described by a
system of equations V=[Z]I, and for a given voltage V the currents I can be
calculated by solving the system. The analysis can be done in sinusoidal steady
state, what will give the usual skin effect as function of the frequency.
Transient analysis is also possible. For simple shapes as cylinders and tubes,
the exact solution is known, I believe.

Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz

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