Part of your difficulty with heating copper and aluminum is likely that their thermal conductivity is higher, not just their electrical conductivity. This means your temperature rise will be lower, even when you are delivering the same amount of power.
The higher electrical conductivity means you will have to modify your circuit to most effectively deliver power. The easiest way to do this is to change the number of turns in the coil, or change its size.
Both copper and Aluminium have high electrical conductivity; that means induction heating will be less effective (compared to iron). if you increase the operating frequency, there will be less penetration due to skin effect. If you decrease the frequency, you will need higher power.
Welding a tube of Cu with Al is tricky because neither of the metals have a wide softening point where they can be nicely joined. That mean the temperature control is also critical. The joint may not be strong because Cu and Al does not form an alloy.
How you are calculating the optimum frequency? That depends on the overall mass and the power needed. I am not sure about the details.
Its not just the large capacitance, at resonance there can be hundreds or even thousands of rms circulating reactive amps.if freq is 3kHz and working coil is 2uH so parallel capacitance should be 1400uF!!
any idea to reduce this huge capacitance?
If you already know, why are you asking...For melting applications, frequency should be low, thats because of skin depth effect
For melting applications, frequency should be low, thats because of skin depth effect...
If you already know, why are you asking...
Actually the useful frequency depends completely on your induction oven geometry. High frequencies work with open magnetic path configurations e.g. an induction cooker. I have seen the mentioned low frequency ovens in a steel mill with a donut melting pot and closed magnetic path. In an open magnetic path with air gap, the high conductive metal simply shorts the magnetic field and doesn't absorb much power.
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Presumed 3 kHz is a useful working frequency and you have 2 µH coil inductance, what's the expected coil current? 50 A, 100 A, 200 A or more? What's the power stage DC supply voltage? I would expect a considerable higher inductance to achieve handy current and voltage levels.
It might be worth contacting some induction heater manufacturers, telling them exactly what your process is, and getting them to recommend suitable equipment.
That might at least get you started on narrowing down the required power, frequency, and coil geometry.
As far as building a suitable tank circuit, I have no real idea what the operating Q of these things normally is, but a guess might be between 5 and 7.
So if you need 10Kw into the load, the circulating power and circulating current is going to be multiples of 10Kw.
The impedance of what you use to drive the tank circuit with is important too.
It could be vacuum tubes run at many Kv, or at only 3Khz it might even be GTO SCRs with only a few hundred volts.
So the actual optimum values of Xl and XC can vary rather a lot.
Its really difficult to know where to begin.
Some expert advice is called for here, its a really specialized field.
I already answered the question. In my view, the observation confirms my previous comments. A coil geometry that works for steel with 20 to 30 kHz must be operated with a considerable higher frequency for Cu/Al. The only chance to get some energy absorbed in an open path magnet circuit is to utilize skin effect and heat up only a thin layer of the material.My main question was about suitable frequency for AL and Cu not for steel. my dc bus voltage is about 48vdc,10A (just for test) with half bridge topology with some measurements i got 300Vpp @30khz, when working coil loaded with stell this voltage drops heavily. now when i load a working coil with Cu or Al, nothing change, just small temperature raising in part, small drop of working coil voltage.
About 10KwWhat kind of power level are you talking about?
When I was doing Induction heating, Aluminium melting Furnaces did run at about 3kHz so you're in the right ballpark.
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