In such transformers, variable frequency is the normal operating
condition and as the frequency increases, the significances of the
elements in the equivalent circuit changes.
- At very low frequencies, for example, the magntising reactance
is small enough to be comparable with or even less than load impedance
so that this tends to be ''shorted out'' and the secondary terminal
voltage is greatly reduced.
- In the intermediate frequency range, is high enough for its
effects to be neglected and the leakage impedance absorbs only a
moderate fraction of the available voltage.
- With further increase of frequency, however the leakage
reactance drop tends to cause the output voltage to fall appreciable
again.
Capacitance between turns and between the windings and earth can
no longer be ignored since these are shunted across the circuit in a
distributed fashion causing behaviour similar to a leading power factor
load.
The design problem here is to ensure the transfer, from primary
to secondary, without excessive distortion, of an input signal having
many frequency components ; for example a pulse of voltage or and input
having the complex frequency spectrum of a musical note. In the
high-power field too, with the advent of thyristor inverters, supply
voltage may be far from sinusoidal and may appear as castellated or
other compositive waveform.
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