Dave 

 

Ø  Jones, even at 40 kHz it is going to be extremely difficult to get enough 
current to flow inside a coil of wire.  Remember, they normally drive the 
expansive sheet of resistive metal that has an effective resistance that is 
much less than an ohm.   The coils that we are using is in the vicinity of 10 
ohms.  

 

Yes, that is true but don’t forget that the tube fill mix can be made 
conductive as well. 

 

This is the reason I suggested to Jack to use Fe3O4 instead of Fe2O3 as the 
bulk fill (or support material) with an inductor setup. The former is 6 orders 
of magnitude more electrically conductive than the later.



So, you have a magnetic field that enters a much larger area of resistive metal 
when a pan is placed upon the unit than with the small coil.   Then, the length 
of wire used in the coil has a large series resistance whereas the pan is more 
of a parallel resistance and much less in total value.   Both of these effects 
are working against you.

 

I agree but Fe3O4 is highly conductive - although we do not know what happens 
at elevated temperature in the presence of reducing compounds, but as long as 
it is not further oxidized, Fe3O4 should be in the few Ohm range, no?

 

Not to mention acting as a transformer coil, to an extent.

 

Jones





 

Reply via email to