Electronic – Frequency dependent resistor in real inductor (air coil)

inductorresonance

I tried to measure the resonance frequency of some multi layer air coils. Typical parameters are 0.6 mm copper wire, 3 to 8 layers, and diameter and height are approx 50 mm. I solder a 1 Ohm resistor to the coil and connect it the shortest way possible to a frequency generator. The output current saturates at low frequencies and the adjusted voltage drops, but I normalize accordingly.
When measured with an RLC-meter the coil has about \$L = 5\;\rm{mH}\$ and \$R = 5\;\Omega\$. Measuring \$C\$ does not make sense as the effect is much smaller than \$L\$. So I check the resonance by measuring the voltage over the \$R_0 = 1\;\Omega\$ resistor and the total circuit with a scope. I was expecting a behavior that you get from a simple equivalent circuit, i.e. \$L\$ in series with \$R\$ and \$C\$ parallel to both.

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

So here is what I get
enter image description here

The small dashes are the data. The dotted lines are fits where I fix \$L\$ and \$R\$ and \$R_0\$ as measured from the LCR meter and allow only \$C\$ to vary. This does obviously not fit the data. The dashed line additionally has \$R\$ free to fit, but this doesn't work either, especially not for the 8 layer rectangular coil. The continuous line fits very well but it assumes the resistor \$R\$ to behave as
$$ R = R_\rm{const} + \omega \; r_\omega $$
i.e. a resistance changing linear with frequency. The parameters should be pretty far away for significant changes due to skin effect. Losses due to eddy currents are unlikely as well (I checked with and without a big aluminum sheet near by: no difference).

So what am I actually measuring?

Edit
Is it radiating? Long wave radio would be up to 300 kHz.

Best Answer

I made a little FEM simualtion of an air coil with paramters as you describe (5 cm height and width, 0.6 mm wire diameter copper, L = 5 mH, Rdc = 5 ohm, N = 450 in 6 layers). After 10 kHz the resistance increases significantly due to skin- and proximity-effect, see figure. I guess proximity effect is a main contributor.

enter image description here