Motors
Motors
The original "dynamo principle" of Wehrner von Siemens or Werner von Siemens referred
only the direct current generators which use exclusively the self-excitation (self-induction)
principle to generate DC power. The earlier DC generators which used permanent magnets were
not considered "dynamo electric machines". The invention of the dynamo principle (self-induction)
was a huge technological leap over the old traditional permanent magnet based DC generators.
The discovery of the dynamo principle made industrial scale electric power generation technically
and economically feasible. After the invention of the alternator and that alternating current can be
used as a power supply, the word dynamo became associated exclusively with
the commutated direct current electric generator, while an AC electrical generator using
either slip rings or rotor magnets would become known as an alternator.
Commutation
The commutator is needed to produce direct current. When a loop of wire rotates in a magnetic
field, the magnetic flux through it, and thus the potential induced in it, reverses with each half turn,
generating an alternating current. However, in the early days of electric
experimentation, alternating current generally had no known use. The few uses for electricity,
such as electroplating, used direct current provided by messy liquid batteries. Dynamos were
invented as a replacement for batteries. The commutator is essentially a rotary switch. It consists
of a set of contacts mounted on the machine's shaft, combined with graphite-block stationary
contacts, called "brushes", because the earliest such fixed contacts were metal brushes. The
commutator reverses the connection of the windings to the external circuit when the potential
reverses, so instead of alternating current, a pulsing direct current is produced.
Excitation
The earliest dynamos used permanent magnets to create the magnetic field. These were referred
to as "magneto-electric machines" or magnetos. However, researchers found that stronger
magnetic fields, and so more power, could be produced by using electromagnets (field coils) on
the stator. These were called "dynamo-electric machines" or dynamos. The field coils of the stator
were originally separately excited by a separate, smaller, dynamo or magneto. An important
development by Wilde and Siemens was the discovery (by 1866) that a dynamo could
also bootstrap itself to be self-excited, using current generated by the dynamo itself. This allowed
the growth of a much more powerful field, thus far greater output power.