- Location
- Placerville, CA, USA
- Occupation
- Retired PV System Designer
Stray magnetic fields around a transformer will go up during saturation, only because the primary current will go up and the magnetic field from the coll will spread out more, looking more like an air core winding, instead of being confined to the core region.In over simplified terms, is this because the core can no longer hold any more magnetic field, and as a result it can't push back (counter) the extra field from the winding? Is that extra field in the winding, or lack there of in the core, proportional to the current?
Do the EMFs around a transformer go up during saturation? Is it from the core or wingdings?
And yes, the back EMF from the increased current in the winding will be lower than it would be with an unsaturated core because a given increase in current will produce a smaller increase in magnetic field flux and hence a lower counter EMF. The worst, limiting, case will be as if the primary winding were air core only with a corresponding reduction in magnetizing impedance.