Ac Motors » Rotating magnetic fields

Rotating Magnetic Fields

The principle of rotating magnetic fields is the key to the operation of most AC motors. Both synchronous and induction types of motors rely on rotating magnetic fields in their stators to cause their rotors to turn. A magnetic field in a stator can be made to rotate electrically, around and around. Another magnetic field in the rotor can be made to chase it by being attracted and repelled by the stator field. Because the rotor is free to turn, it follows the rotating magnetic field in the stator.

Rotating magnetic fields may be set up in two-phase or three-phase machines. To establish a rotating magnetic field in a motor stator, the number of pole pairs must be the same as (or a multiple of) the number of phases in the applied voltage. The poles must then be displaced from each other by an angle equal to the phase angle between the individual phases of the applied voltage.