Generators & Dynamos

Development and History of the component that made electricity first commercially feasible

Dynamos and Generators convert mechanical rotation into electric power.

Dynamo - a device that makes direct current electric power using electromagnetism. It is also known as a generator, however the term generator normally refers to an "alternator" which creates alternating current power.

Generator - normally this term is used to describe an alternator which creates AC power using electromagnetism.



Generators, Dynamos, and Batteries are the three tools necessary to create/store substantial amounts of electricity for human use. Batteries may have been discovered as early as 248 BC. They simply use chemical reaction to make and store electricity. Scientists experimented with the battery to invent the early incandescent lamp, electric motors and trains, and scientific tests. However batteries were not reliable or cost effective for any regular electrical use, it was the dynamo that radically changed electricity from a curiosity into a profitable, reliable technology.

1. How it Works

2. Brief History of Dynamos and Generators

3. Videos of generators



1.) How it Works:

Basic:

First you need a mechanical power source like a turbine(powered by water falling), wind turbine, gas turbine or steam turbine. A shaft from one of these devices is connected to a generator to make power.

Dynamos and generators work using the wild complex phenomena of electromagnetism. Understanding the behavior of electromagnetism, its fields and its effects is a large subject of study. There is a reason why it took 60 years AFTER Volta's first battery to get a good powerful dynamo working. We will keep things simple to help introduce you to the interesting subject of power generation.

In the most basic sense a generator/dynamo is one magnet rotating while inside the influence of another magnet's magnetic field. You cannot see a magnetic field, but it is often illustrated using lines of flux. In the illustration above lines of magnetic flux would follow the lines created by the iron filings. The generator/dynamo is made up of stationary magnets (stator) which create a powerful magnetic field, and a rotating magnet (rotor) which distorts and cuts through the magnetic lines of flux of the stator. When the rotor cuts through lines of magnetic flux it makes electricity. But why? Due to Faraday's Law of Induction if you take a wire and move it back and forth in a magnetic field, the field pushes on electrons in the metal. Copper has 27 electrons, the last two in the orbit are easily pushed on to the next atom. This movement of electrons is electrical flow.

See the video below showing how current is induced in a wire:

If you take a lot of wire such as in a coil and move it in the field, you create a more powerful "flow" of electrons. The strength of your generator depends on: "l"-Length of the conductor in the magnetic field

"v"-Velocity of the conductor (speed of the rotor)

"B"-Strength of the electromagnetic field You can do calculations using this formula: e = B x l x v

See the video to see all of this demonstrated:

About the magnets:

Above: a simple electromagnet referred to as a solenoid. The term "solenoid" actually describes the tubular shape created by the coiled wire. The magnets are usually not made of natural magnetite or a permanent magnet (unless it is a small generator), but they are copper or aluminum wire coiled around an iron core. Each coil must be energized with some power to make it into a magnet. This coil around iron is called a solenoid. Solenoids are used instead of natural magnetite because the solenoid is MUCH more powerful. A small solenoid can create a very strong magnetic field.

Above: The coils of wire in the generators must be insulated. Generator failure is caused by temperatures rising too high which results in a breakdown of insulation and a short between to parallel wires. Learn more about wires >

Terms:

Electromagnetism - study of forces that happen between electrically charged particles

Rotor - part of the generator of dynamo that rotates

Armature - same as a rotor

Flux - the lines of strength in a magnetic field, it is measured in density, SI unit of weber

Stator - magnets in a generator/dynamo that do not move, they establish the stationary magnetic field

Solenoid - a magnet created by a wire coil around an iron/ferris core (solenoid technically means the shape of this magnet, but engineers refer to solenoid and electromagnet interchangeably.

Commutator - Learn more detail about them here

Torque - force in a rotational motion

Also see our page on Induction.

The Dynamo

Dynamo is an older term used to describe a generator that makes direct current power. DC power sends electrons in only one direction. The problem with a simple generator is that when the rotor rotates it eventually turns completely around, reversing the current. Early inventors didn't know what to do with this alternating current, alternating current is more complex to control and design motors and lights for. Early inventors had to figure a way to only capture the positive energy of the generator, so they invented a commutator. The commutator is a switch that allows current to only flow in one direction.

See the video below to see how the commutator works:

The Dynamo consists of 3 major components: the stator, the armature, and the commutator.

Brushes are part of the commutator, the brushes must conduct electricity as the keep contact with the rotating armature. The first brushes were actual wire "brushes" made of small wires. These wore out easily and they developed graphic blocks to do the same job. The stator is a fixed structure that makes magnetic field, you can do this in a small dynamo using a permanent magnet. Large dynamos require an electromagnet.



The armature is made of coiled copper windings which rotate inside the magnetic field made by the stator. When the windings move, they cut through the lines of magnetic field. This creates pulses of electric power. The commutator is needed to produce direct current. In direct current power flows in only one direction through a wire, the problem is that the rotating armature in a dynamo reverses current each half turn, so the commutator is a rotary switch that disconnects the power during the reversed current part of the cycle.

Self excitation:

Since the magnets in an dynamo are solenoids, they must be powered to work. So in addition to brushes which tap power to go out to the main circuit, there is another set of brushes to take power from from the armature to power the stator's magnets. That's fine if the dynamo is running, but how do you start a dynamo if you have no power to start?

Sometimes the armature retains some magnetism in the iron core, and and when it begins to turn it makes a small amount of power, enough to excite the solenoids in the stator. Voltage then begins to rise until the dynamo is at full power.

If there is no magnetism left in the armature's iron, than often a battery is used to excite the solenoids in the dynamo to get it started. This is called "field flashing".

Below in the discussion of wiring the dynamo you will notice how power is routed through the solenoids differently.

There are two ways of wiring a dynamo: series wound and shunt wound. See the diagrams to learn the difference.



Below, video of a small simple dynamo similar to the diagrams above (built in the 1890s):

The Generator

The generator differs from the dynamo in that it produces AC power. Electrons flow in in both directions in AC power. It wasn't until the 1890s that engineers had figured out how to design powerful motors, transformers and other devices which could use AC power in a way that could compete with DC power.

While the alternator uses commutators, the generator uses a slip ring with brushes to tap the power off of the rotor. Attached to the slip ring are graphite or carbon "brushes" which are spring loaded to push the brush onto the ring. This keeps power consistently flowing. Brushes get worn down over time and need to be replaced.

Below, video of slip rings and brushes, many examples from old to new:

Since the time of Gramme in the 1860s it was figured out that the best way to build a dynamo/generator was to arrange magnetic coils around a wide circle, with a wide spinning armature. This looks different than the simple small dynamo examples you see used in teaching how the devices work.

In the photo below you will see clearly one coil on the armature (the rest were removed for servicing) and other coils built into the stator.

From the 1890s until today 3 phase AC power has been the standard form of power. Three phases is made through the design of the generator.

To make a three phase generator you have to place a certain number of magnets on your stator and armature, all with proper spacing. Electromagnetism is as complex as dealing with waves and water, so you need to know how to control the field through your design. Problems include having your magnet unevenly attracted to the iron core, improper calculations of the distortion of the magnetic field (the faster it spins, the more the field is distorted), spurious resistance in the armature coils, and a myriad of other potential problems.

Why 3 phase? if you want to know more about phases and why we use 3 phase, see our video with power transmission pioneer Lionel Barthold.

2.) A Brief History of Dynamos and Generators:

The generator evolved from work by Michael Faraday and Joseph Henry in the 1820s. Once these two inventors discovered and documented the phenomena of electromagnetic induction, it lead to experimentation by others in both Europe and North America.

1832 - Hippolyte Pixii (France) built the first dynamo using a commutator, his model created pulses of electricity separated by no current. He also by accident created the first alternator. He did not know what to do with the changing current, he concentrated on trying to eliminate the alternating current to get DC power, this led him to create the commutator.



1830s-1860s - The battery is still the most powerful way to supply electricity for the various experimentation going on in that period. Electricity was still not commercially viable. A battery powered electric train from Washington DC to Baltimore failed, proving a gross embarrassment to the new field of electricity. After millions of dollars wasted steam still proved to be a better power source. Electricity still needed to prove to be reliable and commercially viable.



1860 - Antonio Pacinotti- Created a dynamo that provided continuous DC power



1867 - Werner Von Siemens and Charles Wheatstone create a more powerful, more useful dynamo which used a self powered electromagnet in the stator instead of the weak permanent magnet.



1871 - Zenobe Gramme sparked the commercial revolution of electricity. He filled the magnetic field with an iron core which made a better path for magnetic flux. This increased the power of the dynamo to the point were it was usable for many commercial applications.



1870s - There was an explosion of new designs in dynamos, designs ranged a wild assortment, only a few stood out as being superior in efficiency.



1876 - Charles F. Brush (Ohio) developed the most efficient and reliable dynamo design ever to that point. His inventions was sold through the Telegraph Supply Company.



1877 - The Franklin Institute (Philadelphia) conducts test on dynamos from around the world. Publicity from this event spurs development by others like Elihu Thomson, Lord Kelvin, and Thomas Edison.





Above: Edison's Long Legged Mary, a commercially successful dynamo for his DC systems 1884 1878 - The Ganz Company begins to use AC generators in small commercial installations in Budapest .



1880 - Charles F. Brush had over 5000 arc lights in operation, representing 80 percent of all lamps world wide. The economic power of electrical age had begun. 1880-1886 - Alternating Current systems develop in Europe with Siemens, Sabastian Ferranti, Lucien Gaulard, and others. DC dynamos reign supreme in the lucrative American market, many are skeptical to invest in AC. AC generators were powerful, however the generator alone was not the biggest problem. Systems for control and distribution of AC power needed to be improved before it could compete with DC on a market. 1886 - In the North American Market inventors like William Stanley, George Westinghouse, Nikola Tesla, and Elihu Thomson develop their own AC systems and generator designs. Most of them used Siemens and Ferranti generators as their basis of study. William Stanley was quickly able to invent a better generator after being unsatisfied with the Siemens generator he used in his first experiment.

Above: Siemens AC generators used in London in 1885, in the US Edison was reluctant to jump into the AC power field while in Europe the technology was developing rapidly.



1886-1891 - Polyphase AC generators are developed by C.S. Bradly (US), August Haselwander (Germany), Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovsky (Germany/Russia), Galileo Ferraris (Italy), and others. AC systems which include better control and powerful electric motors allow AC to compete.





1891 - Three-Phase AC power proves to be the best system for power generation and distribution at the International Electro-Technical Exhibition in Frankfurt. The three-phase generator designed by Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovsky used at the exhibition is seen at left.



1892 - Charles P. Steinmetz presents his paper to the AIEE on hysteresis. Steinmetz's understanding of the mathematics of AC power is published and helps revolutionize AC power system design, including large AC Generators. 1890s - Generator design is improved rapidly thanks to commercial sales and available money for research. Westinghouse, Siemens, Oerlikon, and General Electric develop the world's most powerful generators. Some generators still operate 115 years later. (Mechanicville, NY)





Above: 1894 Elihu Thomson developed many AC generators for General Electric

A later Westinghouse 2000 kW 270 Volt generator from after 1900

3. Videos