Journal Article10.1109/TMAG.2010.2049026
Cylindrical Magnets and Coils: Fields, Forces, and Inductances
207
TL;DR: In this paper, a synthesis of analytical calculations of magnetic parameters (field, force, torque, stiffness) in cylindrical magnets and coils is presented, which can be implemented in Mathematica or Matlab and are available online.
read more
Abstract: This paper presents a synthesis of analytical calculations of magnetic parameters (field, force, torque, stiffness) in cylindrical magnets and coils. By using the equivalence between the amperian current model and the coulombian model of a magnet, we show that a thin coil or a cylindrical magnet axially magnetized have the same mathematical model. Consequently, we present first the analytical expressions of the magnetic field produced by either a thin coil or a ring permanent magnet whose polarization is axial, thus completing similar calculations already published in the scientific literature. Then, this paper deals with the analytical calculation of the force and the stiffness between thin coils or ring permanent magnets axially magnetized. Such configurations can also be modeled with the same mathematical approach. Finally, this paper presents an analytical model of the mutual inductance between two thin coils in air. Throughout this paper, we emphasize why the equivalence between the coulombian and the amperian current models is useful for studying thin coils or ring permanent magnets. All our analytical expressions are based on elliptic integrals but do not require further numerical treatments. These expressions can be implemented in Mathematica or Matlab and are available online. All our models have been compared to previous analytical and semianalytical models. In addition, these models have been compared to the finite-element method. The computational cost of our analytical model is very low, and we find a very good agreement between our analytical model and the other approaches presented in this paper.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Dissertation
Forward and inverse calculation methods for Lorentz force evaluation applied to laminated composites
Judith Mengelkamp
- 25 Jan 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed and evaluated forward and inverse calculation methods for Lorentz force evaluation (LFE) using the non-destructive testing method Lorenttz force eddy current testing (LET).
6
Magnetic Fields and Forces in an Ambient Temperature Passive Magnetically Levitated Bearing System
Kevin Bachovchin
- 01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: In this article, an ambient temperature passive magnetic bearing system that can stably levitate a rotor in all directions is presented, which consists of two pairs of annular ring magnets which provide the upward magnetic levitation force necessary to counteract the downward gravitational force of the rotor.
5
Influence of the multi-component electrical feed of air-core industrial reactors on their sound radiation
Paul Gning,Vincent Lanfranchi,Nicolas Dauchez +2 more
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: In this paper, the spectral components present in the supply current of industrial dry-type air-core reactors are shown to produce a significant acoustic radiation, and the multi-physics computation process allowing to determine the acoustic pressure induced by each force component is presented.
Computation of magnetic field and force between circular filaments arbitrarily positioned in space
Anele O. Amos,Hamam Ykandar,Alayli Yasser,Djouani Karim +3 more
- 13 Jul 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of lateral and angular misalignment on the magnetic field and the magnetic force components between circular filaments which are arbitrarily positioned in space are investigated. But, the purpose of CIPT systems is not always attainable due to lateral or angular misaligned between the primary and the secondary coils.
5
Machine Learning Aided Design and Analysis of a Novel Magnetically Coupled Ball Drive
Biruk A. Gebre,Kishore Pochiraju +1 more
TL;DR: The results show that it is possible to control the traction forces at both drive and ground surfaces using the magnetic coupling force and substantially increase the slip performance of the ball drive using the new design.
5
References
FASTHENRY: a multipole-accelerated 3-D inductance extraction program
TL;DR: Results from examples are given to demonstrate that the multipole acceleration can reduce required computation time and memory by more than an order of magnitude for realistic integrated circuit packaging problems.
990
Force and Stiffness of Passive Magnetic Bearings Using Permanent Magnets. Part 2: Radial Magnetization
TL;DR: In this paper, the Coulombian model was used to calculate the force and stiffness between two ring permanent magnets whose polarization is axial, and the exact position of the rings for which the force is the strongest depends on the air gap dimension.
Inductance Calculations for Noncoaxial Coils Using Bessel Functions
TL;DR: In this paper, a relatively simple and general method for calculating the mutual inductance and self-inductance of both coaxial and non-coaxial cylindrical coils is given.
189
Mutual Inductance Calculation for Non-Coaxial Circular Air Coils with Parallel Axes
TL;DR: In this article, a simple and simple method for calculating the mutual inductance between two non-coaxial circular coils with parallel axes is presented. But it is not suitable for all possible circular coils such as coils of rectangular cross section, thin wall solenoids, thin disk coils (pancakes) and circular filamentary coils.
Magnetic Force Calculation Between Thin Coaxial Circular Coils in Air
Slobodan Babic,Cevdet Akyel +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present new and fast procedures for calculating magnetic forces between thin coaxial circular coaxial coils in air, expressed in semianalytical form in terms of the complete elliptical integrals of the first and second kind, Heuman's Lambda function, and a term that must be solved numerically.