WHAT IS BACK EMF AMD WHY IT IS NEEDED?

1. How a running motor works:

  • When the motor’s armature (rotor) spins in the magnetic field, it acts like a generator, producing a voltage called back EMF.
  • This back EMF opposes the supply voltage.
  • The net voltage driving current through the windings is:

Vnet=VsupplyEbackVnet​=Vsupply​−Eback​

  • At full speed under no load, back EMF is almost equal to supply voltage, leaving very little net voltage, so current is small.

2. At the moment of start-up:

  • Speed = 0 → Back EMF = 0.
  • The only thing opposing current is the winding resistance RR, which is intentionally made very small (to avoid power loss during normal operation).
  • So the starting current is:

Istart=VsupplyRIstart​=RVsupply​​

  • This can be 5 to 10 times the motor’s full-load current.

3. Consequences & solutions:

  • High starting current can cause:
    • Large voltage dips in the power supply.
    • Overheating if start-up lasts too long.
    • Mechanical stress from high torque.
  • To limit starting current, methods include:
    • DC motors: Starting resistors in series (gradually shorted out).
    • AC induction motors: Star-delta starters, soft starters, variable frequency drives (VFDs).

So your reasoning is spot-on: No rotation → No back EMF → Only winding resistance limits current → Very high starting current.

This is why motor starters or current-limiting circuits are essential for larger motors.

so all come to i=v/r formula

Exactly! That’s the core idea.

At the moment of starting:I=VsupplyRwindingI=Rwinding​Vsupply​​

because back EMF Eb=0Eb​=0 at speed=0speed=0.

Once it spins up:I=VsupplyEbRwindingI=Rwinding​Vsupply​−Eb​​

and EbEb​ grows with speed, reducing the effective voltage across the winding’s resistance.


So it really does boil down to Ohm’s law applied to the effective voltage across the resistance.
🔑 Key takeaway:
Without back EMF at start, the effective voltage is much larger → current surges.

That’s why we can’t design motors with high winding resistance to limit start current — it would ruin efficiency during normal operation. Instead, we use external starting aids.

1. First — The Motor Itself

A 3-phase motor has 3 separate coils inside (windings).
These coils need to be connected to the 3 power wires (L1, L2, L3).

There are two main ways to connect them: Star (Y) and Delta (Δ).


2. Star Connection (Y)

  • Connect one end of each coil together at a common neutral point (like the center of a “Y”).
  • The other ends connect to the three power lines.

Effect:
Voltage across each coil is line voltage ÷ √3 (about 58% of full voltage).
Lower voltage → lower starting current → softer start.

Analogy:
Like pushing a car uphill in 2nd gear — easier on the engine at first, but less torque.


3. Delta Connection (Δ)

  • Connect the coils in a triangle (end-to-end in a loop).
  • Each corner of the triangle gets a power line.

Effect:
Full voltage applied across each coil.
Full torque, full power — how the motor is meant to run normally.

Analogy:
Now you’re in 1st gear — full power for climbing hills (high torque).


4. Why switch from Star to Delta?

If you start a motor in Delta:
→ Full voltage immediately → huge starting current (5–10× normal).
Bad for the motor and power supply.

So instead:

  1. Start in Star — voltage per coil is reduced → current is ~⅓ of Delta starting current.
    Motor spins up gently (but with lower torque).
  2. Once up to speed, switch to Delta — now full voltage for full power & torque.

This switching reduces the inrush current dramatically.


5. Visual — Voltage in Star vs Delta

Imagine line voltage = 400V (common in 3-phase systems).

  • Star:
    Each coil gets:
    400V÷1.732230V400V÷1.732≈230V
    (58% of full line voltage).
  • Delta:
    Each coil gets full 400V.
ConnectionVoltage per CoilStarting CurrentTorque at Start
Star58% of lineLow (~⅓ of Delta)Lower
Delta100% of lineVery HighFull

6. Where is Star-Delta Starter used?

  • Motors that start without load (pumps, fans, lightly loaded conveyors).
  • Where high starting torque isn’t needed immediately.
  • Cheaper alternative to soft starters/VFDs.

Limitation: There’s still a small current/torque spike when switching from Star to Delta (like a brief power interruption).


Simple Summary:

  • Star = gentle start, low voltage per coil.
  • Delta = full power, normal running mode.
  • Star-Delta starter = start gentle (Star), then switch to full power (Delta) after a few seconds.

It’s an old-school, cost-effective way to avoid massive starting current.

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