The questions then become;
A/ Will the conductor continuously rotate about the axis if the direct current is a constant one?..
As I see your most recent post is a simplification of the motor for purposes of clarifying the underlying principle. It looks at the same problem in a different inertial reference frame. As you no doubt know, the force is the same in any inertial reference frame. If it works on dc, the principle is the same as your earlier motor and the motor I proposed.
Namely, the principles which suggest these motors will produce torque:
1 – We know there is force F=qVxB = Length I x B on a current carrying conductor in a magnetic field
2 – We think that that F=qVxB = Length I x B force still occurs when the conductor is moving relative to the magnets that produced the field (as long as current and field don't change).
3 – We think that at least part of the equal/opposite reaction force associated with that force on conductor occurs on the magnet which is located on the other side of the airgap. This amounts to torque transfer accross the airgap.
Items 2 and 3 are subject to further discussion (are they correct?) but 2 and 3 must be true for these devices to work. Even if 2 and 3 are correct, we still need another step of analysis to understand torque vs speed characteristics.
fwiw, I have done an F.E. analysis of a simplified/reduced version of my proposed motor in the condition (attached). It shows that in the static condition of this simplified/reduced device there is a force on the conductors roughly predicted by F=qVxB, and that the equal/opposite reaction force occurs primarily on the permanent magnets. What it means is for this particular geometry in the static condition torque is produced.
Also we know that any dc motor of the type we discuss must include generator action. If you rotate it backwards it should produce dc voltage. If you rotate it forward under load, it should produce a voltage opposite in polarity to the applied voltage which permits conservation of energy (I*E_induced = Pmechanical including mechanical losses). I am still trying to figure out how that would occur. As a start, in my motor diagram, the flux from a single magnet linked to a single partial arc coil changes over time which could possibly provide the mechanism for induced voltage. But one would think the device should work even if the rotor was uniformly loaded with magnets, in which case it is very difficult to see any mechanism for change in linked stator flux over time. Without that piece of the puzzle, it can't work.
The questions then become;
.....
B/ Will the conductor continuously rotate about the axis if the direct current is a pulsed one?
C/ Will the conductor oscillate if the current is an alternating one?
As I see it, if these devices as built do not work on dc, then they will not work on ac or pulsed dc. To take advantage of any of these, you would need more than one phase in your stator winding.
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