To say it another way, the time-averaged voltage across an inductor is zero because it is not a voltage source.You ask "How VL=0?".
VL is not 0: the integral of VL over the period T is 0.
Wouldn't that then also apply to the time-averaged voltage across a resistor, since it's not a voltage source either?To say it another way, the time-averaged voltage across an inductor is zero because it is not a voltage source.
I knew someone would catch me! But yeah, I assumed in the TS's scenario that the inductor is ideal (no resistance) so that even a DC current causes no average voltage across the inductor.Wouldn't that then also apply to the time-averaged voltage across a resistor, since it's not a voltage source either?
But you're on the right track.
That's essentially it. The point I was getting at is that it is neither a net energy source nor a net energy sink.I knew someone would catch me! But yeah, I assumed in the TS's scenario that the inductor is ideal (no resistance) so that even a DC current causes no average voltage across the inductor.
yeah this is the point, thanksI knew someone would catch me! But yeah, I assumed in the TS's scenario that the inductor is ideal (no resistance) so that even a DC current causes no average voltage across the inductor.
Faraday's law provides that the inductor flux is proportional to the integral of the voltage across the inductor. If there is a non-zero time-average voltage, then there is a steadily increasing flux in the steady state, and that means there is a steadily increasing energy in the magnetic field, which is a net power flow into the field.I think you could create a periodic waveform that, in steady state, has no net power into or out of the inductor but yet has a non-zero time-average voltage.
I buy that. I hadn't gotten around to playing with it yet. I don't know how easy I would have come to that conclusion or how long it would have taken me to go back to Maxwell's equations.Faraday's law provides that the inductor flux is proportional to the integral of the voltage across the inductor. If there is a non-zero time-average voltage, then there is a steadily increasing flux in the steady state, and that means there is a steadily increasing energy in the magnetic field, which is a net power flow into the field.