Hall effect

From bildr

Jump to: navigation, search

As an electric current flows through an electrical conductor in a magnetic field, the magnetic field exerts a transverse force on the moving charge carriers, providing a tendency for the charge carrier to move to one side of the conductor.

Technical Details

For simple metals, the charge carriers are only electrons, and the Hall Voltage (V->H) is defined by:

<math>V_H = IB / ned</math>

where I is the current across the plate length, B is the magnetic flux density, d is the depth of the plate, e is the electron charge, and n is the charge carrier density is the electrons.

Applications

Hall Probes are usually used as magnetometers (measurement of magnetic fields). Hall sensors produce a very low signal and therefore tend to need amplification. Hall Effect Sensors typically contain both a Hall Probe and high-gain integrated circuit amplifier.

Hall Probes can be used for measuring magnetic fields, but are typically used as parts of larger sensors, such as high-precision switches and rotation sensors.

This page is an Article on bildr. Articles are pages that define or explain a concept, method, or generic item.

NOTE: All information contained within this article is pure opinion. Although this article is intended to help people, it may contain faulty or misleading information. This article is not to be considered professional opinion or advice, and is in no way a replacement for reading all safety/instructional documentation. Always remember to protect yourself when handling/using hazardous materials, as well as test new techniques before using them on projects/work intended to be handed in or used.

bildr and its contributers take NO responsibility for the information contained within.