Soter Salem Posted August 17, 2011 Posted August 17, 2011 Some slight confusion on the part of electricity and the conversion to mechanical force; I believe I understand enough about circuits, current flow, capacitors and the like to know that side of the question, but what I don't see is how electricity is converted to large scale (relative to an electron) motion. For example, if I wanted to make an extremely basic fan, how would I go about doing it so that the electric potential stored inside the batteries powers the movement of the blades?
Enthalpy Posted August 19, 2011 Posted August 19, 2011 Your battery would produce a strong and long-lasting current, or flow of electrons, not only a potential quickly vanished as in typical experiments with electrostatic toys. Send this current in an electric motor to rotate the fan. Up to now, all efficient motors use a magnetic field to produce a "Lorenz force" (Wiki) in a conductor where a current flows. This has made electric machines possible historically. My electrostatic alternator-motor is an alternative (or at least I believe it...). This way hadn't been taken for a century, as it looks. http://saposjoint.net/Forum/viewtopic.php?f=66&t=1684 But I didn't check if it's any usable for a fan. Normal air isn't the very good insulator my machine prefers. On dam alternators we can afford vacuum, on wind turbines a liquid insulator, on boat propeller pods a high-pressure special gas; in a fan I imagine only air. Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy
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