Teaching Minds-On Experiments on Electromagnetism in Secondary Schools Homopolar motor
Simple homopolar motor made with drywall
screw, alkaline cell, wire, and neodymium disk magnet. The screw and magnet
contact the bottom of the battery cell and are held up by magnetic
attraction. In the homopolar motor, the electric current produced by the
battery moves radially through the disk magnet, which has a magnetic field along
its longitudinal axis. The resulting Lorentz force in the tangential direction
produces a torque in the magnet, which is free to rotate with the attached
screw. It is not necessary for the magnet to be electrically conductive, or to
move. One can attach the magnet to the battery and allow the wire to rotate
freely while closing the electric circuit even at the axis of rotation.