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Coils are often useful as educational tools. Mag. Erwin Kohaut, a physics teacher at the Austrian high school BGRG 12 Rosasgasse in [[Vienna]], [[Austria]], and some students built a Tesla coil as a project. It stands in the cellar of that school. For several years a coil was on display at the [[St. Louis Science Center]]. It was located on the second floor near the [[Omnimax theatre]], high up in a corner several feet behind a safety partition. Visitors could briefly activate the coil by depositing a small monetary donation into a box on the publically-accessible side of the partition.
Coils are often useful as educational tools. Mag. Erwin Kohaut, a physics teacher at the Austrian high school BGRG 12 Rosasgasse in [[Vienna]], [[Austria]], and some students built a Tesla coil as a project. It stands in the cellar of that school. For several years a coil was on display at the [[St. Louis Science Center]]. It was located on the second floor near the [[Omnimax theatre]], high up in a corner several feet behind a safety partition. Visitors could briefly activate the coil by depositing a small monetary donation into a box on the publically-accessible side of the partition.


In Atlanta GA, USA, students at Moorehouse College have constructed a 32ft tall, 4.5 gigawatt coil to demonstrate potential biological effects of high voltage current on human populations. It was designed by Dr.Andrew Hedrick, also of Atlanta, and funded by a grant from Harpo Productions. It is reported that during operation, people within a 20 block radius of the device can feel the hair on the back of their necks stand up, and small sparks can be seen jumping between the teeth of people.
In Atlanta GA, USA, students at Morehouse College have constructed a 32ft tall, 4.5 gigawatt coil to demonstrate potential biological effects of high voltage current on human populations. It was designed by Dr.Andrew Hedrick, also of Atlanta, and funded by a grant from Harpo Productions. It is reported that during operation, people within a 20 block radius of the device can feel the hair on the back of their necks stand up, and small sparks can be seen jumping between the teeth of people.


A very large tesla coil is shown every year at the Coachella music and arts festival, in Coachella, Indio, California, USA.
A very large tesla coil is shown every year at the Coachella music and arts festival, in Coachella, Indio, California, USA.

Revision as of 14:14, 27 March 2007

Tesla Coil at Questacon, the Australian National Science Centre museum

A Tesla coil is a type of disruptive discharge transformer, named after its inventor, Nikola Tesla. Tesla coils are composed of coupled resonant electric circuits. Nikola Tesla actually experimented with a large variety of coils and configurations, so it is difficult to describe a specific mode of construction that will meet the wants of those who ask about "Tesla" coils. "Early coils" and "later coils" vary in configuration and setup. Tesla coils often create long electric discharges, making them very popular devices among high-voltage enthusiasts.

History

Early coils

The American Electrician gives a description of an early tesla coil wherein a glass battery jar, six inches by eight inches, is wound with 60 to 80 turns of American wire gauge No. 18 B & S magnet wire. Into this is slipped a primary consisting of eight to ten turns of AWG No. 6 B & S wire, and the whole combination immersed in a vessel containing linseed or mineral oil. (Norrie, pg. 34-35)

Disruptive "Tesla" coils

In the spring of 1891, Tesla gave demonstrations with various machines before the American Institute of Electrical Engineers at Columbia College. Following the initial research of voltage and frequency by William Crookes, Tesla designed and constructed a series of coils that produced high-voltage, high-frequency currents. These early coils would use the "disruptive" action of a spark gap in their operation. The setup can be duplicated by a Ruhmkorff coil, two condensers (now called capacitors), and a second, specially constructed, disruptive coil. (Norrie, pg. 228)

File:EarlyTeslaCoil.PNG

The Ruhmkorff coil, being fed from a main source, is wired to capacitors on both ends in series. A spark gap is placed in parallel to the Ruhmkorff coil before the capacitors. The discharge tips were usually metal balls under one inch in diameter, though Tesla used various forms of dischargers. The capacitors were of a special design, small with high insulation. These capacitors consisted of plates in oil that were movable. The smaller the plates, the more frequent the discharge of this early coil apparatus. The plates also help nullify the high self inductance of the secondary coil by adding capacity to it. Mica plates were placed in the spark gap to establish an air current jet to go up through the gap. This helped to extinguish the arc, making the discharge more abrupt. An air blast was also used for this objective. (Norrie, pg. 230-231)

The capacitors are connected to a double primary (each coil in series with a capacitor). These are part of the second specially constructed disruptive coil. The primaries each have twenty turns of No. 16 B & S rubber covered wire and are wound separately on rubber tubes not less than a 1/8th inch thick. The secondary has 300 turns of No. 30 B & S silk-covered magnet wire, wound on rubber tube or rod, and the ends encased in glass or rubber tubes. The primaries must be large enough to be loose when the secondary coil is placed between the coils. The primaries must cover around two inches of the secondary. A hard rubber division must be placed between these primary coils. The ends of the primaries not connected with the capacitors are led to a spark gap. (Norrie, pg. 35-36)

In U.S. patent 0,454,622, System of Electric Lighting (1891 June 23), Tesla described this early disruptive coil. It was devised for the purpose of converting and supplying electrical energy in a form suited for the production of certain novel electrical phenomena, which require currents of higher frequency and potential. It also specified an energy storage capacitor and discharger mechanism on the primary side of a radio-frequency transformer. This is the first-ever disclosure of a practical RF power supply capable of exciting an antenna to emit powerful electromagnetic radiation.

Another early Tesla coil was protected in 1897 by U.S. patent 0,593,138, "Electrical Transformer". This transformer developed (or converted) currents of high potential and was comprised of a primary and secondary coil (optionally, one terminal of the secondary could be electrically connected with the primary; similar to modern ignition coils). This Tesla coil had the secondary being inside of, and surrounded by, the convolutions of the primary coil. This Tesla coil comprised of a primary and secondary wound in the form of a flat spiral. One coil, the secondary in step up transformation, of the device consisted of a longer fine-wire. The apparatus was also connected to the Earth when the coil was in use.

Later coils

Tesla coil transformer wound in the form of a flat spiral.
File:OriginalTeslaCoil.png
U.S. Patent 1119732
View in elevation
Free terminal and circuit of large surface with supporting structure and generating apparatus

Tesla, in U.S. patent 0,645,576 System of Transmission of Electrical Energy and U.S. patent 0,649,621 Apparatus for Transmission of Electrical Energy, described new and useful combinations employed in transformer coils. The transmitting coil or conductor arranged and excited to cause currents or oscillation to propagate through conduction through the natural medium from one point to another remote point therefrom and a receiver coil or conductor of the transmitted signals. The production of currents of very high potential could be attained in these coils. He would later attain U.S. patent 0,723,188, Method of Signaling, and U.S. patent 0,725,605, System of Signaling, for coils with elevated transmitter capacitance with an Earth electrode.

Some of Tesla's later coils were considerably larger and operated at much higher power levels. When Tesla patented a later device in U.S. patent 1,119,732 (Apparatus for Transmitting Electrical Energy), he called the device a high-voltage, air-core, self-regenerative resonant transformer that generates very high voltages at high frequency. However, this phrase is no longer in conventional use. The later systems were at times powered from large high voltage power transformers, used banks of glass bottle capacitors immersed in oil to reduce corona losses, and used rotating spark gaps to handle the higher power levels. Tesla also dispensed with using oil to insulate the transformer coils, relying instead on the insulating properties of air. Tesla coils achieve great gain in voltage by loosely coupling two resonant LC circuits together, using an air-core (ironless) transformer. Unlike a conventional transformer, whose gain is limited to the ratio of the numbers of turns in the windings, Tesla coils' voltage gain is proportional to the square root of the ratio of secondary and primary inductances.

Later coil types are the usual devices built by modern enthusiasts. It is an air-core, dual-tuned resonant transformer that generates very high voltages at radio frequencies (RF). The coil achieves a great gain in voltage by transferring energy from one resonant circuit (the primary) to the other (the secondary) over a number of cycles. Tesla Coil operation is significantly different from a conventional transformer whose gain is limited to the ratio of the numbers of turns in the windings.

Although modern Tesla Coils are usually designed to generate long sparks, Tesla's original systems were designed for wireless communication, so he used large radii of curvature to prevent corona and streamer losses. Tesla coils' outer conducting surfaces, which are charged to a high potential, have large radii of curvature to minimise leakage of the oscillating charges through corona discharges or sparks. The intensity of the voltage gain of the circuit with a free, or elevated, toroid is proportional to the quantity of charge displaced, which is determined by the product of the capacitance of the circuit, the voltage (which Tesla called "pressure"), and the frequency of the currents employed. Tesla also used various versions of his coil in experiments with fluorescence, x-rays, wireless power for electric power transmission, electrotherapy, and telluric currents in conjunction with atmospheric electricity.


Electric discharge showing the lightning-like plasma filaments from a Tesla coil. (Click image for higher resolution detail)

Later coils consist of a primary tank circuit, which is a series LC (inductance-capacitance) circuit composed of a high voltage capacitor, spark gap, and primary coil; and the secondary LC circuit, a series resonant circuit consisting of the secondary coil and the toroid. In Tesla's original plans, the secondary LC circuit is composed of a loaded secondary coil which is then placed in series with a large helical coil. The helical coil was then connected to the toroid. Most modern coils use only a single secondary coil. The toroid actually forms one terminal of a capacitor, the other terminal being the Earth (or "ground"). The primary LC circuit is "tuned" so that it will resonate at the same frequency as the secondary LC circuit. The primary and secondary coils are magnetically coupled, creating a dual-tuned resonant air-core transformer. However, unlike a conventional transformer, which may couple 97%+ of the magnetic fields between windings, a Tesla Coil's windings are "loosely" coupled, with the primary and secondary typically sharing only 10-20% of their respective magnetic fields. Most oil insulated transformers need large and long insulations at their connections to prevent discharge in air. Later version Tesla Coils spread their electric field over a large distance to prevent high electrical stresses in the first place, thereby allowing operation in free air.

The terminal consists of a metallic frame in the shape of a toroid, covered with smooth half circular metal plates (constituting a very large conducting surface). Tesla employed on his largest system this type of shaped element within a dome. The top terminal has relatively small capacitance, charged to as high a voltage as practicable. The outer surface of the elevated conductor is where the electrical charge chiefly accumulates. It has a large radius of curvature, or is composed of separate elements which, irrespective of their own radii of curvature, are arranged close to each other so that the outside ideal surface enveloping them has a large radius. [1] This design allows the terminal to support very high voltages without generating corona or sparks. Tesla during his patent application process described a variety of resonator terminals at the top of this later coil. [2] Most Modern Tesla coils use simple toroids, typically fabricated from spun metal or flexible aluminum ducting, to control the high electrical field near the top of the secondary and to direct spark outward, and away, from the primary and secondary windings.

Some of Tesla's work involved a tightly coupled, air core, high frequency transformer, the output of which then fed a resonator coil, sometimes called an "extra coil", or simply an "upper secondary". The principle is that energy accumulates in the resonating, upper coil, and the role of transformer secondary is played by the separate, "lower" secondary; the roles are not shared by a single secondary. Modern three-coil systems often either place the upper secondary some distance from the transformer, or make it of a considerably smaller diameter; magnetic coupling to the upper secondary is not wanted, because each secondary is designed specifically for its role.

In detail, this Tesla circuit consists of a coil in close inductive relation with a primary, and one end of which is connected to a ground-plate, while its other end is led through a separate self-induction coil (whose connection should always be made at, or near, the geometrical center of that coil's circular aspect, in order to secure a symmetrical distribution of the current), and of a metallic cylinder carrying the current to the terminal. The primary coil may be excited by any desired source of high frequency current. The important requirement is that the primary and secondary sides must be tuned to the same resonant frequency to allow efficient transfer of energy between the primary and secondary resonant circuits. Originally, a high frequency alternator or a capacitor discharge were used to excite the primary coil, and modern Tesla Coils may use vacuum tube or power transistor oscillators to excite the primary and generate high frequency current.

In Tesla's design, the conductor of the shaft to the terminal (topload) is in the form of a cylinder with smooth surface of a radius much larger than that of the spherical metal plates, and widens out at the bottom into a hood (which is slotted to avoid loss by eddy currents and for safety). The secondary coil is wound on a drum of insulating material, with its turns close together. When the effect of the small radius of curvature of the wire itself is overcome, the lower secondary coil behaves as a conductor of large radius of curvature, corresponding to that of the drum (this effect is applicable elsewhere). The lower end of the upper secondary coil, if desired, may be extended up to the terminal[citation needed] and should be somewhat below the uppermost turn of the primary coil. This lessens the tendency of the charge to break out from the wire connecting both and to pass along the support.

Transistor and vacuum tube Tesla coils do not use a spark gap. Transistor Tesla coils generally use the lowest primary voltage of the three types, for example perhaps 175 volts in countries with 125 volt power; still lethal but far less prone to tragic accidents. (Known fatalities due to spark gap type voltages include one hobbyist and one child.) The winding of the primary of a traditional transistor Tesla coil closely about only the bottom of the secondary, or resonator, helps to show the operation of the secondary as a pumped resonator, the alternating voltage in the bottom of the secondary that is induced by the primary acting as pushes on a playground swing, that being the remainder of the secondary, i.e. its inductance, its winding capacitance to ground, its turn to turn capacitance and the capacitance to ground of the topload. An electronic feedback circuit is usually used to adaptively synchronize the oscillator to the resonance in the secondary, and this is the only tuning consideration beyond the initial choice of a reasonable topload. In a doubly resonant solid state Tesla coil, one manual and one adaptive tuning adjustment are necessary. Performance can be comparable to a medium power spark gap Tesla coil, and efficiency (as measured by spark length versus input power) can be significantly greater than a spark gap Tesla Coil.

Utilisation and production

File:TCOIL3.png
Typical Tesla Coil Schematic
This example circuit is designed to be driven by alternating currents. Here the spark gap shorts the high frequency across the first transformer. An inductance, not shown, protects the transformer.
File:TCOIL4.png
Alternate Tesla Coil Configuration
This circuit also driven by alternating currents. However, here the AC supply transformer must be capable of withstanding high voltages at high frequencies.

Transmission

A large Tesla coil of more modern design can operate at very high peak power levels, up to many megawatts (a million watts). It should therefore be adjusted and operated carefully, not only for efficiency and economy, but also for safety. If, due to improper tuning, the maximum voltage point occurs below the terminal, along the secondary coil, a discharge (spark) may break out and damage or destroy the coil wire, supports, or nearby objects.

Tesla experimented with these, and many other, circuit configurations (see right). The Tesla Coil primary winding, spark gap and tank capacitor are connected in series. In each circuit, the AC supply transformer charges the tank capacitor until its voltage is sufficient to break down the spark gap. The gap suddenly fires, allowing the charged tank capacitor to discharge into the primary winding. Once the gap fires, the electrical behavior of either circuit is identical. Experiments have shown that neither circuit offers any marked performance advantage over the other.

However, in the typical circuit (above), the spark gap's short circuiting action prevents high frequency oscillations from 'backing up' into the supply transformer. In the alternate circuit, high amplitude high frequency oscillations that appear across the capacitor also are applied to the supply transformer's winding. This can induce corona discharges between turns that weaken and eventually destroy the transformer's insulation. Experienced Tesla coil builders almost exclusively use the top circuit, often augmenting it with low pass filters (resistor and capacitor (RC) networks) between the supply transformer and spark gap. This is especially important when using transformers with fragile high voltage windings, such as Neon-sign transformers (NSTs). Regardless of which configuration is used, the HV transformer must be of a type that self-limits its secondary current by means of internal leakage inductance. A normal (low leakage inductance) high voltage transformer must use an external limiter (sometimes called a ballast) to limit current. NSTs are designed to have high leakage inductance to limit their short circuit current to a safe level.

Safety and precautions

It is advisable to begin the tuning, in which the primary coil's resonant frequency is set to the same value of the secondary coil's, using low-power oscillations, then increasing the power until the apparatus has been brought under control. One or more elements or plates of somewhat smaller radius of curvature or protruding more or less beyond the others (in which case they may be of larger radius of curvature) so that, should the voltage rise too high, the powerful discharge may escape. While tuning, a small projection (called a "breakout bump") is often added to the top terminal in order to stimulate corona and spark discharges (sometimes called streamers) into the surrounding air. Tuning can then be adjusted so as to achieve the longest streamers at a given power level, corresponding to a frequency match between the primary and secondary coil. Capacitive 'loading' by the streamers tends to lower the resonant frequency of a Tesla Coil operating under full power. For a variety of technical reasons, toroids provide an effective overall shape for the top terminals of Tesla coils.

Since Tesla coils can produce currents or discharges of very high frequency and voltage, they are useful for various purposes including classroom demonstrations, theater and movie special-effects, and product/technology safety testing. In typical operation, long, branching, high-voltage sparks may strike out in all directions from the toroid into the air, producing a dangerous, yet strangely beautiful, lightning-like display of electricity 'in action'.

Air discharges

A small, later-type "Tesla coil" in operation. The output is giving 17-inch sparks. The diameter of the secondary is 3 inches. The power source is a 10000 V, 60 Hz current limited supply.

While generating discharges, electrical energy from the secondary and toroid is transferred to the surrounding air as electrical charge, heat, light, and sound. The electric currents that flow through these discharges are actually due to the rapid shifting of quantities of charge from one place (the top terminal) to other places (nearby regions of air). The process is similar to charging or discharging a capacitor. The current that arises from shifting charges within a capacitor is called a displacement current. Tesla Coil discharges are formed as a result of displacement currents as pulses of electrical charge are rapidly transferred between the high voltage toroid and nearby regions within the air (called space charge regions). Although the space charge regions around the toroid are invisible, they play a profound role in the appearance and location of Tesla Coil discharges.

When the spark gap fires, the charged capacitor discharges into the primary winding, causing the primary circuit to oscillate. The oscillating primary current creates a magnetic field that couples to the secondary winding, transferring energy into the secondary side of the transformer and causing it to oscillate with the toroid capacitance. The energy transfer occurs over a number of cycles, and most of the energy that was originally in the primary side is transferred into the secondary side. The greater the magnetic coupling between windings, the shorter the time required to complete the energy transfer. As energy builds within the oscillating secondary circuit, the amplitude of the toroid's RF voltage rapidly increases, and the air surrounding toroid begins to undergo dielectric breakdown, forming a corona discharge.

As the secondary coil's energy (and output voltage) continue to increase, larger pulses of displacement current further ionize and heat the air at the point of initial breakdown. This forms a very conductive "root" of hotter plasma, called a leader, that projects outward from the toroid. The plasma within the leader is considerably hotter than a corona discharge, and is considerably more conductive. In fact, it has properties that are similar to an electric arc. The leader tapers and branches into thousands of thinner, cooler, hairlike discharges (called streamers). The streamers look like a bluish 'haze' at the ends of the more luminous leaders, and it is the streamers that actually transfer charge between the leaders and toroid to nearby space charge regions. The displacement currents from countless streamers all feed into the leader, helping to keep it hot and electrically conductive.

In a spark gap Tesla Coil the primary-to-secondary energy transfer process happens repetitively at typical pulsing rates of 50–500 times/second, and previously formed leader channels don't get a chance to fully cool down between pulses. So, on successive pulses, newer discharges can build upon the hot pathways left by their predecessors. This causes incremental growth of the leader from one pulse to the next, lengthening the entire discharge on each successive pulse. Repetitive pulsing causes the discharges to grow until the average energy that's available from the Tesla Coil during each pulse balances the average energy being lost in the discharges (mostly as heat). At this point, dynamic equilibrium is reached, and the discharges have reached their maximum length for the Tesla Coil's output power level. The unique combination of a rising high voltage Radio Frequency envelope and repetitive pulsing seem to be ideally suited to creating long, branching discharges that are considerably longer than would be otherwise expected by output voltage considerations alone. However, even more than 100 years later after the first use of Tesla Coils, there are many aspects of Tesla Coil discharges and the energy transfer process that are still not completely understood.

Reception

The secondary coil and its capacitor can be used in receive mode[citation needed]. The parameters of a Tesla Coil transmitter are identically applicable to it being a receiver, due to reciprocity. Impedance, however, is not applied in an obvious way; for electrical impedance, the impedance at the load (eg., where the power is consumed) is most critical and, for a Tesla Coil receiver, this is at the point of utilization (such as at an induction motor) rather than at the receiving node.

The Tesla Coil can also be made to utilize atmospheric electricity[citation needed]. Generally, though, Tesla coils are not used for these purposes. Tesla suggested that a variation of the Tesla coil could utilize the phantom loop effect to form a circuit to induct energy from the Earth's magnetic field and other radiant energy sources (including, but not limited to, electrostatics [3]). This concept is part of his wireless transmission of electric power distribution system (US1119732 — Apparatus for Transmitting Electrical Energy — 1902 January 18).

While Tesla himself demonstrated wireless transmission of electric power from a transmitter to a receiver, it will be noted, with regard to Tesla's speculations on the harnessing of natural phenomena to obtain electric power, that the present article does not cite any public demonstration of any such technology, by any individual, group, college or university, industrial concern, government agency or laboratory or other entity of any kind.

The skin effect myth

The dangers of high frequency electrical current are sometimes perceived as being less than at lower frequencies. This is often, but mistakenly, interpreted as being due to skin effect, a phenomenon that tends to inhibit alternating current from flowing inside conducting media. Although skin effect is applicable to effective electrical conductors (i.e., metals), the 'skin depth' of human flesh at typical Tesla Coil frequencies is still of the order of 60 inches or more. This means that high frequency currents will still preferentially flow through deeper, better conducting, portions of an experimenter's body such as the circulatory and nervous systems. In reality, a human being's nervous system does not directly sense the flow of potentially dangerous electrical currents above 15–20 kHz; essentially, in order for nerves to be activated, a significant number of ions must cross their membrane before the current (and hence voltage) reverses. Since the body no longer provides a warning 'shock', novices may touch the output streamers of small Tesla Coils without feeling painful shocks. However, there is anecdotal evidence among Tesla Coil experimenters that temporary tissue damage may still occur and be observed as muscle pain, joint pain, or tingling for hours or even days afterwards. This is believed to be caused by the damaging effects of internal current flow, and is especially common with continuous wave (CW), solid state or vacuum tube type Tesla Coils.

Large Tesla Coils and magnifiers can deliver dangerous levels of high frequency current, and they can also develop significantly higher voltages (often 250,000–500,000 volts, or more). Because of the higher voltages, large systems can deliver higher energy, potentially lethal, repetitive high voltage capacitor discharges from their top terminals. Doubling the output voltage quadruples the electrostatic energy stored in a given top terminal capacitance. If an unwary experimenter accidentally places himself in path of the high voltage capacitor discharge to ground, the high current electric shock can cause involuntary spasms of major muscle groups and may induce life-threatening ventricular fibrillation and cardiac arrest. Even lower power vacuum tube or solid state Tesla Coils can deliver RF currents that are capable of causing temporary internal tissue, nerve, or joint damage through Joule heating. In addition, an RF arc can carbonize flesh, causing a painful and dangerous bone-deep RF burn that may take months to heal. Because of these risks, knowledgeable experimenters avoid contact with streamers from all but the smallest systems. Professionals usually use other means of protection such as a Faraday cage or a chainmail suit to prevent dangerous currents from entering their body.

One hazard often not recognized is that a high frequency arc may strike to the primary, then, if an arc has also been allowed to strike to a person, the ionized gas of the arcs may conduct lethal, low-frequency current from the primary into the person. This is believed to have been the cause of death of a professional Tesla coil demonstrator. [4]

Instances and devices

Tesla's Colorado Springs laboratory possessed one of the largest Tesla coils ever built, known as the "Magnifying Transmitter". The Magnifying Transmitter is somewhat different from classic 2-coil Tesla coils. A Magnifier uses a 2-coil 'driver' to excite the base of a third coil ('resonator') that is located some distance from the driver. The operating principles of both systems are similar. The world's largest currently existing 2-coil Tesla coil was made by Greg Leyh. It is a 130,000 watt unit, part of a 38 foot tall sculpture. It is owned by Alan Gibbs and currently resides in a private sculpture park at Kakanui Point near Auckland, New Zealand. [5]

The Tesla coil is an early predecessor (along with the induction coil) of a more modern device called a flyback transformer, which provides the voltage needed to power the cathode ray tube used in some televisions and computer monitors. The disruptive discharge coil remains in common use as the ignition coil or spark coil in the ignition system of an internal combustion engine. These two devices do not use resonance to accumulate energy, however, which is the distinguishing feature of a Tesla coil. They do use inductive "kick", the forced, abrupt decay of the magnetic field, such that a voltage is provided by the coil at its primary terminals that is much greater than the voltage that was applied to establish the magnetic field, and it is this higher voltage that is then multiplied by the transformer turns ratio. Thus, they do store energy, and a Tesla resonator stores energy.

A modern, low power variant of the Tesla coil is also used to power plasma globe sculptures and similar devices.

Popularity

Tesla coils are very popular devices among certain electrical engineers and electronics enthusiasts. Someone who builds Tesla coils as a hobby is called a "Tesla coiler", or simply a "coiler". There are even "coiling" conventions where people attend with their home made Tesla coils and other electrical devices of interest. It should be noted that there are rather significant safety issues [6] regarding coil assembly and operation by hobbyists (including professional engineers), which may be discovered by study of the literature far more reliably than by only attempting one's own analysis. Many different construction techniques have been established.

Low power Tesla Coils are also sometimes used as a high voltage source for Kirlian photography. [7]

Coils are often useful as educational tools. Mag. Erwin Kohaut, a physics teacher at the Austrian high school BGRG 12 Rosasgasse in Vienna, Austria, and some students built a Tesla coil as a project. It stands in the cellar of that school. For several years a coil was on display at the St. Louis Science Center. It was located on the second floor near the Omnimax theatre, high up in a corner several feet behind a safety partition. Visitors could briefly activate the coil by depositing a small monetary donation into a box on the publically-accessible side of the partition.

In Atlanta GA, USA, students at Morehouse College have constructed a 32ft tall, 4.5 gigawatt coil to demonstrate potential biological effects of high voltage current on human populations. It was designed by Dr.Andrew Hedrick, also of Atlanta, and funded by a grant from Harpo Productions. It is reported that during operation, people within a 20 block radius of the device can feel the hair on the back of their necks stand up, and small sparks can be seen jumping between the teeth of people.

A very large tesla coil is shown every year at the Coachella music and arts festival, in Coachella, Indio, California, USA.

The world's largest conical Tesla coil is on display at Mid America Science Museum in Hot Springs, Arkansas. This coil produces 1.5 million volts of electrical energy.

In fiction

File:Teslacoilredalert2.png
Tesla coil being charged by Tesla Troopers in Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2. An enemy unit is electrocuted by its discharge.

Tesla coils appear as weapons in many computer games, typically firing bolts of electricity at enemies. Other directed-energy weapons with the word "Tesla" in their name also appear. Examples of games featuring Tesla coils and other Tesla weapons are: Blood, Command & Conquer: Red Alert, Destroy All Humans!, Tomb Raider: Legend, Arcanum: Of Steamworks and Magick Obscura, Return to Castle Wolfenstein, Tremulous (a Quake3-mod), World of Warcraft, Dystopia (a Half-Life 2-mod), Ratchet and Clank, BloodRayne 2, and Crimson Skies.

In the game "Sims: Bustin' Out", for the Nintendo Gamecube and GBA, a Tesla Coil is available for purchase. When the Sims use this, it gives them mechanical experience.

The Jim Jarmusch film Coffee and Cigarettes (2003) featured a segment starring the couple Jack and Meg White from the band The White Stripes entitled "Jack shows Meg his Tesla coil". In the segment, the pair are having a coffee. Jack explains the work of Nikola Tesla to Meg and demonstrates the coil he has by his side.

In the novel by Christopher Priest and movie, The Prestige, one the main characters, Rupert Angier, seeks the help of Nikola Tesla (played by David Bowie) to construct a device to transport matter for the purposes of a stage 'magic act'. Tesla then creates a supposed variant of his Tesla Coil to achieve this.

In the animated series Sealab 2021 on Cartoon Network's late-night Adult Swim lineup, Tesla coils make several appearances: In "Waking Quinn", Stormy electrocutes Dr. Quinn by dropping a "bitchin' homemade Tesla coil" into the moon pool; and in "Policy", Sparks kills Captain Murphy by dropping a 'Tesla coil' fashioned out of a potato and some wire into the hot tub the Captain is in.

Related patents

(It should be noted that during Tesla's heyday, the US Patent Office imposed no requirement of proof or demonstration that any patent application was workable or not based on error.)

Tesla's patents
See also: List of Tesla patents
  • "Means for Generating Electric Currents," U.S. Patent No. 514,168, February 6, 1894
  • "Electrical Transformer," Patent No. 593,138, November 2, 1897
  • "Method Of Utilizing Radiant Energy," Patent No. 685,958 November 5, 1901
  • "Method of Signaling," U.S. Patent No. 723,188, Mar. 17, 1903
  • "System of Signaling," U.S. Patent No. 725,605, Apr. 14, 1903
  • "Apparatus for Transmitting Electrical Energy," Jan. 18, 1902, U.S. Patent 1,119,732, Dec. 1, 1914 (available at U.S. patent 1,119,732 and tfcbooks' Apparatus for Transmitting Electrical Energy)
Other's patents

Notes

  1. ^ Patent 1119732, lines 53 to 69; In order to attain the highest possible frequency and to develop the greatest energy in the circuit, Tesla elevated the conductor with a large radius of curvature or was composed of separate elements which in conglomeration had a large radius.
  2. ^ In "Selected Patent Wrappers from the National Archives", by John Ratzlaff (1981; ISBN 0-9603536-2-3), there was a variety of anodes that Tesla described. Besides the torus shaped terminal, he applied for hemi-spherical and oblate terminials. A total of 5 different terminals were applied for, but four were rejected. The terminals could be used to produce, perferably according to Tesla, longitudinal waves and, secondarily, "Hertzian" transverse waves.
  3. ^ Bell, Louis (1901). Electric Power Transmission; a Practical Treatise for Practical Men. p. p. 10. Retrieved 2007-02-15. {{cite book}}: |page= has extra text (help) "Both kinds of strains exist in radiant energy, [...] The stresses in electro-magnetic energy are at right angles both to the electrostatic stresses and to the direction of their motion or flow."
  4. ^ Tesla Coils Safety Information". pupman.com.
  5. ^ The Electrum Project, Lightning On Demand, Brisbane CA
  6. ^ Tesla Coils Safety Information". pupman.com.
  7. ^ "Corona Discharge Electrographic Imaging Technology" Kirlianlab.com.

Further reading

Operation and other information

Electrical World

  • "The Development of High Frequency Currents for Practical Application"., The Electrical World, Vol 32, No. 8.
  • "Boundless Space: A Bus Bar". The Electrical World, Vol 32, No. 19.

Other publications

  • Bieniosek, F. M., "Triple Resonance Pulse Transformer Circuit". Review of Scientific Instruments, 61 (6).
  • Corum, J. F., and K. L. Corum, "RF Coils, Helical Resonators and Voltage Magnification by Coherent Spatial Modes". IEEE, 2001.
  • de Queiroz, Antonio Carlos M., "Synthesis of Multiple Resonance Networks". Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. EE/COPE.
  • Haller, George Francis, and Elmer Tiling Cunningham, "The Tesla high frequency coil, its construction and uses". New York, D. Van Nostrand company, 1910.
  • Hartley, R. V. L., "Oscillations with Non-linear Reactances". Bell Systems Technical Journal, Sun Publishing. 1992.
  • Norrie, H. S., "Induction Coils: How to make, use, and repair them". Norman H. Schneider, 1907, New York. 4th edition.

External links

History sites

Builders and examples

The Geek Group also has a large Bipolar coil on permanent display to the public at their Kalamazoo Michigan facility.

Free Design Programs