Ampere 1
Ampere 1
Ampere 1
OBJECTIVES
To characterize a Hall probe for magnetic field measurements. To develop an operational
understanding of a line integral and to examine the operation of Ampere's Law.
THEORY
At first glance Ampere's Law,
! !
! • ds = µ 0 I
B (1)
just seems to be a complicated way to relate a magnetic field to a current. We are instructed to
!
divide an imaginary closed curve into equal segments of length d s . Compute the dot products
! !
B • ds for all the segments, add them up, and we get a number proportional to the total current I
through the surface that spans the closed curve. The law becomes odder when you think about it
more carefully. Most obviously, the integral does not depend on the path chosen, but only on the
current encircled. Further, the current that appears on the right hand side need not be the only
source of magnetic fields along the path. Somehow the field produced by other currents does not
contribute to the integral. Finally, it is only the net current through the spanning surface that is
important. If we choose a path so that the current loops through it in opposite directions, the right
hand side will be zero even though there is field along the path and a current is encircled. In this
experiment we will see how these results come about.
The instrument we will use to measure magnetic fields is called a Hall probe. The Hall
effect is a potential difference which appears at right angles to the current flow when a conductor
is immersed in a magnetic field. The potential is a consequence of the Lorentz force, acting on
the charge carriers, so it is linearly proportional to the component of the applied field normal to
both the current and the line between the sensing electrodes. By finding the orientation that gives
!
the maximum Hall voltage we can determine the magnitude and direction of B .
Hall control
13.8 V supply
low-voltage
Hall probe supply DMM
Fig. 1 Overall layout of apparatus for Ampere's Law measurements.
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE
We will study the fields produced by one or two coils, mounted on a wooden plotting
surface, as sketched in Fig. 1. The desired path can be marked off on a piece of paper cut to fit
around the coils, and a Hall probe used to determine the dot product. By being a bit clever we
can calibrate the Hall output relative to the current in the coil, and thereby carry out a
quantitative test of Eq. 1.
The coils we will study are mounted on a wooden plotting table. Current is provided by a
fixed 13.8 V supply. The Hall probe is powered from the adjustable low-voltage supply, which
should be set for 8 V output before the Hall control box is plugged into it. Use the DMM to
measure the Hall voltage output from the control box. The Hall element itself is mounted in a
plastic box designed to place the Hall probe at the center of the coil diameter when the box is
standing with the longest dimension vertical on the plotting table.
B0 = µ0 NIc / 2R (2)
when the coil has N turns each carrying current Ic and average radius R. For a path which
encircles one side of the coil the total current appearing in Ampere's Law is NIc, which can be
found from Eq. 2, substituted into Eq. 1, and rearranged to yield
1 ! !
! B • d s = 2R (3)
B0
This means that we can add up the contributions around the path, divide by the Hall reading at
the center of the coil, and compare the result with 2R to verify Eq. 1. For our coils, R = 12.1 cm.
Carry out this procedure for several paths in the vicinity of the coil. It would be of
interest to try paths which encircle one side, both sides and neither side of the coil. Provide
diagrams of the paths in your report, and describe how various parts of the path contribute to the
final sum. Are the overall integrals quantitatively consistent with Eq. 3?
V2
B0! = B (4)
V1 0
Using this value you can deduce relations like Eq. 3 for paths which encircle parts of one, both or
neither coil. You could also repeat the integration along one of the paths you used before to see if
the results are consistent.