As long as it is no air choke all power inductances have a certain saturation characteristic which means the inductance decreases with rising current. This is because of the core materials which loose more power or less permeability at a certain inductance B and act like air in an extreme case. The saturation characteristics of a choke can be influenced
- by the core material - by the core geometry - by the number of windings - by the air gap
However there are often differences of the calculated inductance and the real inductance once the current reaches a certain value (e.g. rated current),
- due to scattering of the cores - due to inaccurate or incomplete data sheets of the core - due to the choke geometry causing an inhomogenous field distribution - due to production tolerances - due to temperature influences
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