czping
There are several differences between an AC and a DC relay.
First: An AC relay core has to be laminated. That is to avoid eddy currents that would heat a massive iron core (that can be used in a DC coil).
Second: It is the impedance of the relay coil and its armature that determines the current drawn by the coil. When the armature halves are separated, the impedance is low because of the low inductance (big air gap) so the starting current gets quite high and helps making the pull-in force high enough to accelerate the moving core quickly into working position. When it has pulled in, the air gap is close to zero and the impedance high so that the operating current of the coil goes down to a low value - and it is this value that is specified on the data sheet.
A DC relay has a constant coil resistance and that means that there is no inrush current - rather the contrary - the current increases like I x (1 - exp(-t/T)), where T is the time constant of the coil (L/R). That is why DC relays often are slow starters (slow current rise + weak force (distance dependent) at the start of the travel).
Third: An AC coil does produce a varying force with a constant mean value and a superimposed sine function with double the mains frequency. The superimposed sine has the same amplitude as the DC mean value. That means that the force moves between zero and double the DC mean. That is why many relays hum at twice the mains frequency and also why a short-cicuiting ring is placed in the pole surface (covering half the area). The ring delays the flux so that it gets phase-shifted. The result is that the original flux and the delayed flux never go to zero at the same time, so the resulting force never goes to zero and the hum is greatly reduced.
There's also a lot to be said about snubbers, tranzorbs, varistors and free-wheeling diodes, but I think that this will be enough for now.