> *Kindly any one show me the graph for inductor current and if possible > explain it. I shall be very grateful!* It's quite easy to do if you use a simulator (like Micro-cap): - [![enter image description here][1]][1] Voltage in blue and current through a 2 henry inductor in red. Timebase in seconds. The current-voltage relationship for an inductor is: - $$V = L\dfrac{di}{dt}$$ The above can be solved for current by integrating both sides. $$i = \dfrac{1}{L}\int{v\: dt}$$ And, for a linearly rising voltage (\$v = V_{PK}\cdot t\$), $$i = \dfrac{V_{PK}}{L}\int{t\: dt} = \dfrac{V_{PK}}{2L}t^2$$ Circuit: - [![enter image description here][2]][2] Slope of the current graph -------------------------- [![enter image description here][3]][3] This is just to show that visualizing the slope helps to understand the formula. I've got a green circle on the current graph and I've visually calculated the slope to be 5 amps per second. This corresponds with an applied voltage at that moment (blue circle) of 10 volts and, given that the inductance is 2 henry, the slope mathematically agrees because: - $$\dfrac{V}{L} = \dfrac{di}{dt} = 5\text{ amps per second}$$ [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/Q9zxN.png [2]: https://i.sstatic.net/tv5Er.png [3]: https://i.sstatic.net/ExKY5.png