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d
Explanation: The reduction of the number of secondary turns reduces the transformation
ratio. If the number of secondary turns reduces by 1 percent the actual transformation
ratio reduces by equal percentage
If the number of secondary turns in a transformer is reduced, the following effects can be observed:
1. Lower secondary voltage: According to the principle of transformers, the voltage across the secondary coil is proportional to the number of turns in the secondary coil (V_s = (N_s/N_p) * V_p, where V_s is the secondary voltage, N_s is the number of secondary turns, N_p is the number of primary turns, and V_p is the primary voltage). Therefore, reducing the number of secondary turns will proportionally decrease the secondary voltage.
2. Higher secondary current capability: With a reduction in the secondary voltage (for a given power level), the secondary current will increase because power (P = V * I) must remain constant, assuming an ideal transformer with no losses. This means if the voltage decreases, the current must increase to maintain the same power level.
3. Altered turns ratio: The transformer’s turns ratio (the ratio of the number of turns in the primary coil to the number of turns in the secondary coil) will increase, affecting the voltage transformation ratio. This will directly impact how the transformer steps up or steps down voltage.
4. Potential for increased efficiency in some scenarios: If the transformer is being used in applications where a lower secondary voltage and higher current are desirable, reducing the number of secondary turns might slightly improve efficiency by better matching the transformer’s characteristics to its load. However, this is highly dependent on the specific application and