Rosemary,
I am a bit perplexed by something that you said sometime ago, and that I can't find again, but it was about your concern that the body diode inside the Mosfet was limiting the performance of the circuit.
From my understanding of conventional electronics, this diode would not come on during any phase of operation of your circuit. I don't see any reverse current flowing at any time in the Mosfet.
When an inductor relaxes after being charged, the current being generated is in the same direction as the one that charged it.
Yet, you seem to imply that there is a reversal of current in the inductor.
Here is an excerpt from your recent post # 258:
"3. Now as we all know when the switch is opened we see the reverse flow as the field collapses. If at this instant when the switch is opened and the two ends of the wire(battery disconnected) are shorted out we see the same current flow through our ammeters(reverse direction)."
Would you care to explain in detail the concept by which this is taking place.
Thanks
I am a bit perplexed by something that you said sometime ago, and that I can't find again, but it was about your concern that the body diode inside the Mosfet was limiting the performance of the circuit.
From my understanding of conventional electronics, this diode would not come on during any phase of operation of your circuit. I don't see any reverse current flowing at any time in the Mosfet.
When an inductor relaxes after being charged, the current being generated is in the same direction as the one that charged it.
Yet, you seem to imply that there is a reversal of current in the inductor.
Here is an excerpt from your recent post # 258:
"3. Now as we all know when the switch is opened we see the reverse flow as the field collapses. If at this instant when the switch is opened and the two ends of the wire(battery disconnected) are shorted out we see the same current flow through our ammeters(reverse direction)."
Would you care to explain in detail the concept by which this is taking place.
Thanks
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