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Picohenry (pH) Unit Definition
The picohenry is a multiple of the unit henry (H) for inductance. The International System of Units (SI) defines the prefix pico (p) as a factor of 10-12 or 0.000000000001. Per this definition, one picohenry is 10-12 henry. The picohenry is represented by the symbol pH.
Overview
The inductance of an electric circuit is one henry when an electric current that is changing at one ampere (A) per second (s) results in an electromotive force of one volt (V) across the inductor: V(t) = L dI⁄dt, where V(t) denotes the resulting voltage across the circuit, I(t) is the current through the circuit, and L is the inductance of the circuit.
The henry is a derived unit based on four of the seven base units of the International System of Units: kilogram (kg), meter (m), second (s), and ampere (A). Expressed in combinations of SI units, the henry is: H = kg∙m2⁄s2∙A2 = N∙m⁄A2 = kg∙m2⁄C2 = J⁄A2 = T∙m2⁄A = Wb⁄A = V∙s⁄A = s2⁄F = Ω⁄Hz = Ω∙s. Where: H = henry, kg = kilogram, m = meter, s = second, A = ampere, N = newton, C = coulomb, J = joule, T = tesla, Wb = weber, V = volt, F = farad, Ω = ohm, Hz = hertz.
Use
The International System of Units (SI) specifies to write the symbol of a unit named for a person with an initial capital letter, while the name is not capitalized in sentence text, except when any word in that position would be capitalized, such as at the beginning of a sentence or in material using title case. The United States National Institute of Standards and Technology recommends users writing in English to use the plural as henries.
Applications
The inductance of a coil depends on its size, the number of turns, and the permeability of the material within and surrounding the coil. Formulas can be used to calculate the inductance of many common arrangements of conductors, such as parallel wires, or a solenoid. A small air-core coil used for broadcast AM radio tuning might have an inductance of a few tens of microhenries (μH). A large motor winding with many turns around an iron core may have an inductance of hundreds of henries. The physical size of an inductance is also related to its current carrying and voltage withstand ratings.
Other Inductance Unit Definitions
- Attohenry (aH)
- Centihenry (cH)
- Decahenry (daH)
- Decihenry (dH)
- Dekahenry (daH)
- Exahenry (EH)
- Femtohenry (fH)
- Gigahenry (GH)
- Hectohenry (hH)
- Henry (H)
- Kilohenry (kH)
- Megahenry (MH)
- Microhenry (μH)
- Millihenry (mH)
- Nanohenry (nH)
- Petahenry (PH)
- Picohenry (pH)
- Quectohenry (qH)
- Quettahenry (QH)
- Ronnahenry (RH)
- Rontohenry (rH)
- Terahenry (TH)
- Yoctohenry (yH)
- Yottahenry (YH)
- Zeptohenry (zH)
- Zettahenry (ZH)
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Sources
“Henry (Unit).” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 23 Jan. 2021, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_(unit).