- Mendocino motor
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The Mendocino motor is a solar-powered magnetically-levitated electric motor.
Contents
Description
The motor consists of a four-sided (square cross-section) rotor block in the middle of a shaft. The rotor block has two sets of windings and a solar cell attached to each side. The shaft is positioned horizontally and has a magnet at each end. The magnets on the shaft provide levitation by repelling magnets in a base under the motor. There is an additional magnet that sits under the rotor block and provides a magnetic field for the rotor.
When light strikes one of the solar cells, it generates an electric current thus energizing one of the rotor windings. This produces a magnetic field which interacts with the field of the magnet under the rotor. This interaction causes the rotor to turn. As the rotor rotates, the next solar cell moves into the light and energizes the second winding, creating a current in an opposite direction to the first thus maintaining the rotation. This process repeats as the motor spins.
At present, this is a novelty; it has a very low power output.
History
The idea of a light-commutated motor where solar cells power the individual coils of a motor has been first described by Daryl Chapin in an experiment kit from 1962 about solar energy.[1] The kit was distributed by Bell Labs where Chapin together with his colleagues Calvin Fuller and Gerald Pearson had invented the modern solar cell eight years earlier in 1954.[2] Instead of using magnetic levitation Chapin's version of the motor uses a glass cylinder on a needle point as a low-friction bearing.
References
- ^ Daryl M. Chapin (1962). "Uses and Demonstrations". Bell System Science Experiment No. 2: Energy from the Sun. Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated. p. 77.
- ^ "Bell System Memorial: Bell Labs Science Kits (Energy From The Sun)". http://www.porticus.org/bell/belllabs_kits_se.html. Retrieved 2009-11-24.
See also
Electric motors Broad motor categories Conventional
electric motorsUnusual electric motors Ball bearing • Homopolar • Piezoelectric • Ultrasonic • Electrostatic • Switched reluctance • Superconducting electric machine • Electrically powered spacecraft propulsionMotor
controllersSee also Barlow's wheel • Nanomotor • Traction motor • Lynch motor • Mendocino motor • Repulsion motor • Inchworm motor • Booster (electric power) • Brush (electric) • Electrical generator • AlternatorExternal links
Categories:- Electric motors
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