Transformer: Principle, Working, Formulae, Losses and Applications
Complete premium Physics notes with exam-ready diagrams, derivations, losses, transmission logic, solved numericals, case studies and practice questions.
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Section 1: Transformer Diagram
Section 2: Definition
A transformer is an electrical device which changes the magnitude of alternating voltage or alternating current without changing the frequency, using the principle of mutual induction.
Section 3: Principle
A transformer works on mutual induction. When alternating current flows through the primary coil, changing magnetic flux is produced in the soft iron core. This changing flux links with the secondary coil and induces alternating emf in the secondary coil.
- Changing current is required.
- Changing magnetic flux is required.
- Therefore AC works, but steady DC does not work.
Section 4: Uses of Transformer
- Step-up transformer increases AC voltage.
- Step-down transformer decreases AC voltage.
- Used in long-distance power transmission.
- Used in adapters and chargers.
- Used in substations and local distribution.
- Used in electrical appliances.
- Used for isolation and voltage matching.
- It can step up or step down only AC voltage, not steady DC voltage.
Section 5: Types of Transformer
Step-up Transformer
- N2 > N1
- V2 > V1
- I2 < I1
- Used for long-distance power transmission.
Step-down Transformer
- N2 < N1
- V2 < V1
- I2 > I1
- Used near homes and in local distribution.
| Point | Step-up Transformer | Step-down Transformer |
|---|---|---|
| Turns ratio | N2 > N1 | N2 < N1 |
| Voltage | V2 > V1 | V2 < V1 |
| Current | I2 < I1 | I2 > I1 |
| Main use | Transmission at high voltage | Safe distribution to homes |
Section 6: Components of Transformer
| Component | Function |
|---|---|
| Primary winding | Receives AC input voltage and produces changing magnetic flux. |
| Secondary winding | Receives changing flux and provides induced output voltage. |
| Soft iron core | Provides low-reluctance path for magnetic flux. |
| Laminated core | Reduces eddy current loss by increasing resistance to circulating currents. |
| Insulation | Prevents short circuit between turns and between windings/core. |
| Load resistance | Receives output electrical power from secondary coil. |
| AC source | Supplies alternating current required for transformer action. |
Section 7: Working of Transformer
- AC voltage V1 is applied to the primary coil.
- Alternating current I1 flows in the primary coil.
- Changing magnetic flux is produced in the soft iron core.
- This changing flux links with the secondary coil.
- Alternating emf V2 is induced in the secondary coil.
- If load is connected, current I2 flows through the load.
Section 8: Mathematical Derivation
Let primary turns = N1, secondary turns = N2, primary voltage = V1 and secondary voltage = V2.
Section 9: Efficiency of Transformer
η = Output power / Input power η = (V2 I2)/(V1 I1) η% = (Output power / Input power) × 100For an ideal transformer, η = 100%, so V1 I1 = V2 I2.
Example 1: Efficiency
Given: Input power = 500 W, output power = 450 W.
Formula: η% = Output/Input × 100
Solution: η% = 450/500 × 100 = 90%.
Example 2: Output Power
Given: η = 80%, input power = 1000 W.
Formula: Output = η × Input
Solution: Output = 0.80 × 1000 = 800 W.
Section 10: Transformer Losses
| Loss | Cause | Reduction Method |
|---|---|---|
| Copper loss | Current flowing through windings produces heat. Copper loss = I²R. | Use thick copper wires and low-resistance windings. |
| Hysteresis loss | Repeated magnetisation and demagnetisation of the core. | Use soft iron or high permeability material with narrow hysteresis loop. |
| Eddy current loss | Changing magnetic flux induces circulating currents inside the core. | Use laminated core. Laminations increase resistance to eddy current paths. |
| Flux leakage | Some flux produced by primary coil does not link with secondary coil. | Use closed soft iron core and proper winding design. |
| Heating and insulation loss | Heat weakens insulation and energy is wasted in practical operation. | Use proper cooling, insulation and rated operation. |
Section 11: Why High Voltage Is Used For Long Distance Transmission
Power transmitted is P = VI. For the same power, I = P/V. If voltage is increased, current decreases. Power loss in transmission wires is Ploss = I²R. Therefore, at high voltage, current becomes small, so I²R loss becomes very small.
Section 12: Power Distribution Diagram
Section 13: Why Transformer Does Not Work On DC
A transformer requires changing magnetic flux. In steady DC, current becomes constant after switching on, magnetic flux becomes constant and dΦ/dt = 0. Therefore no emf is induced in the secondary coil.
Section 14: Formula Sheet
Section 15: Numerical Problems
Problem 1: Turns Ratio
Given: N1 = 500, N2 = 2000, V1 = 220 V.
Formula: V2/V1 = N2/N1
Solution: V2 = 220 × 2000/500 = 880 V.
Common mistake: Reversing N1 and N2.
Exam tip: If N2 > N1, voltage increases.
Problem 2: Step-down Voltage
Given: V1 = 11000 V, N1 = 5000, N2 = 100.
Formula: V2 = V1 × N2/N1
Solution: V2 = 11000 × 100/5000 = 220 V.
Common mistake: Forgetting that domestic supply needs step-down operation.
Exam tip: Near homes, transformers are step-down.
Problem 3: Current Ratio
Given: V1 = 200 V, V2 = 1000 V, I1 = 5 A.
Formula: V1I1 = V2I2
Solution: I2 = 200 × 5 / 1000 = 1 A.
Common mistake: Thinking current also increases in a step-up transformer.
Exam tip: Voltage increases but current decreases for ideal step-up transformer.
Problem 4: Efficiency
Given: V1 = 220 V, I1 = 4 A, V2 = 400 V, I2 = 2 A.
Formula: η% = V2I2/V1I1 × 100
Solution: η% = 400 × 2 /(220 × 4) × 100 = 90.9%.
Common mistake: Using only voltage ratio for efficiency.
Exam tip: Efficiency is power ratio, not voltage ratio.
Problem 5: Copper Loss
Given: Current = 8 A, winding resistance = 0.5 Ω.
Formula: Copper loss = I²R
Solution: Loss = 8² × 0.5 = 32 W.
Common mistake: Using IR instead of I²R.
Exam tip: Heating loss always depends on square of current.
Problem 6: Long-distance Transmission
Given: Power = 100 kW, voltage = 10 kV.
Formula: I = P/V
Solution: I = 100000/10000 = 10 A.
Common mistake: Not converting kW and kV.
Exam tip: High voltage keeps current small.
Problem 7: Loss Reduction
Given: Current is reduced to one-fourth at same wire resistance.
Formula: P_loss = I²R
Solution: New loss = (I/4)²R = I²R/16.
Common mistake: Saying loss becomes one-fourth.
Exam tip: Square-law reduction is very important.
Problem 8: DC Supply
Given: A transformer is connected to steady DC.
Formula: Induced emf = -N dΦ/dt
Solution: For steady DC, flux is constant, so dΦ/dt = 0. Hence no secondary emf is produced continuously.
Common mistake: Forgetting momentary switching emf.
Exam tip: Mention continuous transformer action is impossible on steady DC.
Section 16: Exam Practice Questions
CBSE Class 12
- Define transformer and state its principle.
- Why does a transformer not work on DC?
- Derive V2/V1 = N2/N1.
- Explain copper, hysteresis and eddy current losses.
- Numerical: N1 = 1000, N2 = 50, V1 = 2200 V. Find V2.
NEET
- MCQ: In a step-up transformer, current in secondary is greater or smaller?
- Find current ratio for turns ratio 1:5.
- Which material reduces hysteresis loss?
- Why is core laminated?
- Power loss in wires becomes what if voltage is doubled?
JEE Main
- Calculate efficiency from V1, I1, V2 and I2.
- Assertion-reason: Transformer changes voltage but not frequency.
- Compare step-up and step-down transformer.
- Find copper loss for given winding resistance.
- Explain high voltage transmission mathematically.
JEE Advanced
- Discuss flux leakage and non-ideal transformer behavior.
- Power loss reduces by factor 100. Find current reduction factor.
- Analyze transformer with efficiency 85% and load current.
- Explain why current ratio is inverse of voltage ratio.
- Case question based on transmission grid.
IB Physics
- Explain energy conservation in an ideal transformer.
- Draw labelled transformer diagram.
- Describe the role of the iron core.
- State one environmental benefit of high voltage transmission.
- Numerical based on efficiency.
IGCSE / GCSE Physics
- State whether transformer works with AC or DC.
- Name the input and output coils.
- Explain step-up transformer use.
- Calculate secondary voltage from turns ratio.
- Why are power lines at high voltage?
ICSE / ISC Physics
- State Faraday's law relation used in transformer.
- Why is soft iron used in the core?
- What is eddy current loss?
- Define efficiency.
- Find output power for given efficiency.
A-Level / British Curriculum
- Derive transformer equation from Faraday's law.
- Evaluate losses in a loaded transformer.
- Explain ideal versus practical transformer.
- Calculate transmission loss at two different voltages.
- Explain magnetic flux linkage.
Section 17: Case Study Questions
Case Study 1: Transformer in Power Transmission
Passage: A power station uses a step-up transformer before sending electrical power through long transmission lines. Near the city, a step-down transformer supplies safer voltage to homes.
- Why is voltage increased before transmission?
- Which loss is reduced?
- Which transformer is used near homes?
- Does frequency change?
Explanation: For same power, I = P/V. High voltage means small current and small I²R loss.
Case Study 2: Step-up and Step-down Transformer
Passage: A transformer has more turns in secondary than primary in one setup, and fewer turns in secondary in another setup.
- Which setup is step-up?
- What happens to secondary current in step-up?
- Which setup is used in chargers?
- Write voltage ratio formula.
Explanation: Voltage follows turns ratio, while current follows inverse ratio.
Case Study 3: Why Transformer Works Only On AC
Passage: A student connects a transformer to a battery and observes no continuous output from the secondary coil.
- What type of current does a battery provide?
- Why is no continuous emf induced?
- What is dΦ/dt for steady DC?
- Can a momentary emf appear?
Explanation: Transformer action requires changing magnetic flux, which steady DC cannot provide continuously.
Case Study 4: Transformer Losses
Passage: A practical transformer becomes warm during operation and its output power is less than input power.
- Name the winding heat loss.
- How is copper loss reduced?
- Which loss is reduced by laminations?
- Which core material reduces hysteresis loss?
Explanation: Practical transformers lose energy as heat, magnetic hysteresis, eddy currents and flux leakage.
Case Study 5: Efficiency of Transformer
Passage: A transformer takes 1000 W input power and gives 920 W output power to a load.
- Find efficiency.
- Is it ideal?
- What is lost power?
- Give one cause of loss.
Explanation: Efficiency = output/input × 100 = 920/1000 × 100 = 92%.
Section 18: Kumar Sir Exam Tips
- Transformer works on mutual induction.
- Transformer works only on AC, not steady DC.
- Frequency does not change in a transformer.
- Step-up transformer increases voltage but decreases current.
- Step-down transformer decreases voltage but increases current.
- For ideal transformer: N2/N1 = V2/V1 = I1/I2.
- High voltage transmission reduces I²R loss.
- Laminated core reduces eddy current loss.
- Soft iron core reduces hysteresis loss.
- Copper loss is reduced by using low-resistance thick copper wires.
If Transformer, AC circuits or Electromagnetic Induction is not clear, contact Kumar Sir for one-to-one online Physics classes.
Contact: +91-9958461445
Email: kumarsirphysics@gmail.com
Website: https://kumarphysicsclasses.com
