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2D and 3D magnetic shielding simulation methods and practical solutions

2D and 3D magnetic shielding simulation methods and practical solutions. Oriano Bottauscio. Istituto Elettrotecnico Nazionale Galileo Ferraris Torino, Italy. Summary. Part I – General principles of magnetic field mitigation Part II - Mathematical models for shielding problems

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2D and 3D magnetic shielding simulation methods and practical solutions

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  1. 2D and 3D magnetic shielding simulation methods and practical solutions Oriano Bottauscio Istituto Elettrotecnico Nazionale Galileo Ferraris Torino, Italy

  2. Summary • Part I – General principles of magnetic field mitigation • Part II - Mathematical models for shielding problems • Part III – Magnetic material properties and influence of geometrical parameters • Part IV – Examples of applications

  3. Part I: General principles of magnetic field mitigation

  4. Concept of passive shielding • One strategy for reducing magnetic fields in a specific region is to make use of material properties for altering the spatial distribution of the magnetic field from a given source. • A quantitative measure of the effectiveness of a passive shield in reducing the magnetic field magnitude is the shielding factor, s , defined as:

  5. Two basic physical mechanisms • Two separate physical mechanisms can contribute to materials-based magnetic shielding. Magnetostatic shielding, obtained by shunting the magnetic flux and diverting it away from a shielded region. Eddy current shielding, obtained in presence of time-varying magnetic fields by inducing currents to flow whose effect is to "buck out" the main fields.

  6. Magnetostatic shielding • It is realized by the introduction of ferromagnetic materials having high magnetic permeability, which create a preferential path for the magnetic field lines • A considerable reduction of the magnetic field is generally reached in the region beyond the shield • This is the only passive shield solution in presence of d.c. magnetic fields

  7. Magnetostatic shielding Without shield Shield

  8. Ideal cases: infinite cylinder and spherical shields • For cylindrical and spherical shields with relative permeability µr inner radius a and thickness  the shielding factor in presence of a uniform magnetic field is: Cylinder Sphere

  9. Ideal case: infinite cylinder and spherical shields Large relative permeability and large ratio of thickness to diameter produce good shielding.

  10. Eddy current shielding • Time varying magnetic fields induce electromotive forces and, consequently, eddy currents are forced to circulate in the conductive material. • Induced currents constitute an additional field source, which is superimposed to the main magnetic field. • The global effect is a compression of the flux lines on the source hand and a reduction of the magnetic flux density beyond the shields. • Obviously, this kind of shield is not effective for d.c. fields and its efficiency increases with the supply frequency.

  11. Eddy current shielding Without shield Shield

  12. Ideal case: infinite cylinder shield • For a long cylindrical shield with permeability μo, conductivity , inner radius a, and thickness ∆ in a sinusoidally varying field at angular frequency , the shielding factor is given by: At the increasing of conductivity, radius, and thickness the shielding efficiency increases.

  13. From ideal to actual shields • The analysis of ideal shields having cylindrical or spherical shapes is useful as a first approach to understand the factors affecting the shielding mechanism. • Anyway, in most cases actual shielding configurations are far from these idealized geometries. • In order to reproduce actual conditions, more sophisticated models have to be implemented.

  14. Part II: Mathematical models for shielding problems

  15. Peculiarities of shielding problems • Main peculiarities of the problem: • the shields usually have small thickness with respect to other dimensions  scale problem • The field is usually not limited in a defined volume open boundary problems • Presence of significant electromagnetic effects • Possible complex geometrical situationsAnalytical formula are not always available

  16. Possible approaches to simulation • The solution of Maxwell equations is needed. • Standard Finite Element codes are usually not adequate for two main reasons: • Open boundary domains • Scale problem introduced by thin shields • Possible alternative approaches: • Analytical methods (only for simple geometries) • Hybrid Finite Element – Boundary Element formulations (mainly for 2D open boundary nonlinear problems) • Thin shield formulation (2D-3D open boundary linear problems)

  17. Analytical methods • Two possible alternative analytical approaches: • Separation of variables • Simple geometrical configurations: • Closed cylindrical or spherical shields • Infinite planar shield • More complex material properties (linear behaviour) • Conformal mapping • More complex geometrical configurations • Idealized material properties: • Ideal pure conductive (PES) • Ideal pure ferromagnetic (PMS)

  18. r , , t y x Im L Separation of variables: Planar one-layer shield

  19. y x h -I +I L Limit of the assumption of infinite shield Infinite shield (analytical) No shield Actual solution Infinite shield (analytical) No shield Actual solution

  20. jv plane t +I jv0 jy plane z - I (0,j) z = -l z = -l +I jy0 u0 - z=+l  = 0  = 2 + x0 +l x - l Negligible tickness • Transformal mapping: planar shield w = complex magnetic potential PMS (perfect magnetic shield)   0, r  + PES (perfect electric shield)   +, r = 1

  21. y x h -I +I L Limit of the assumption of PMS No shield Actual solution PMS h = 0.6 m No shield Actual solution h = 0.15 m PMS

  22. 2D Hybrid FEM-BEM formulation • To handle open-boundary fields, the domain is fictitiously subdivided into: • An “internal” limited region i (including the shields) • An “external” unlimited region e (including field sources) ni i J0  e ne Magnetic field h is expressed as the sum of two terms: Shield effects Field of the sources

  23. “Internal” region • Linearization of B-H curve by Fixed Point technique Introduction of magnetic vector potential a

  24. “External” region • Green formulation applied to am:

  25. p+1 ni ti BEM FEM te ne p Complete set of equations • By introducing continuity conditions at FEM-BEM boundaries we obtain:

  26. Measurement point Shield Busbars Effect of magnetic material nonlinearity • Two busbars leading high current are shielded by a cylindrical Fe-Ni alloy • The material of the shield is modeled assuming: • linear behaviour (μr = 300000) • First magnetisation B-H curve

  27. Effect of magnetic material nonlinearity

  28. “Thin-shield” formulation:basic principle • The goal of this approch is to remove the shield thickness, by substituting the 3D shield with an equivalent 2D structure • This results is obtained by acting on two geometrical scales: a “microscopic” scale on the shield thickness and a “macroscopic” scale on the shield surface • Working on the “microscopic” scale the shield thichness is substituted by suitable interface conditions

  29. w n (b) t 2 d v t u 1 (a) “Thin-shield” formulation: assumptions Working at the “microscopic” scale, the field behaviour inside the shield is assumed to depend only on the w coordinate • The two sides of the shield are indicated with (a) and (b), assuming n oriented from (a) to (b) Shield: Magnetic permeability  Electrical conductivity  An expression of H inside the shield is found: penetration depth C1, C2 = integration constants

  30. “Thin-shield” formulation:I interface equation • Starting from the Maxwell equation: the I interface condition is obtained:

  31. “Thin-shield” formulation:II interface equation • Considering an infinitesimalcylinder of volume V: the II interface condition is obtained:

  32. w n (b) t 2 d v t u 1 (a) “Thin-shield” formulation:Resulting interface conditions • The resulting interface conditions: (I) (II) link the normal and tangential components of the magnetic field the two sides of the shield

  33. “Thin-shield” formulation:Field equations on the shield surface • In the two homogeneous external regions (a) and (b), where field source are present, the magnetic field H can be written as: Curl-free reduced field Reduced scalar potential Source field

  34. “Thin-shield” formulation:Multilayered screens • In presence of multilayered screens, the field equations obtained by the interface conditions can be generalized. For the generic i-th layer, the following interface conditions are deduced:

  35. “Thin-shield” formulation:Multilayered screens • The layers are connected in cascade, by multiplying the matrices of each single layer:

  36. “Thin-shield” formulation:Resulting FEM equations • The field equations on the shield surfaces are solved by FEM, discretizing the screens into 2D elements (for 3D problems) or 1D elements (for 2D problems). • The weak formulation (w=test function) leads to:

  37. “Thin-shield” formulation:Integral equations • In the two external regions, integral equations can be written, applying the Green theorem: Side (b) FEM equations on shield surface n Side (a)

  38. Codes available at IEN 2D Code PowerField (2D thin-shield formulation) Sally2D Code (Hybrid nonlinear FEM-BEM formulation) Sally3D Code (3D thin-shield formulation)

  39. Part III: Magnetic material properties and influence of geometrical parameters

  40. Ferromagnetic shieldsInfluence of material properties • The behaviour of ferromagnetic materials is defined by the first magnetisation curve • In principle, all ferromagnetic materials can be in principle used for passive shielding • In many applications (e.g. open shields) shielding devices are characterized by giving rise to low magnetic flux density values inside the materials • The shielding efficiency strongly depends on the value of the initial permeability (Rayleigh region)

  41. Nickel-Iron alloys Nickel-Iron alloys (mumetal, permalloy) exhibits very high permeability (r~105). They are available as bulk or thin (up to 10 m) laminations. Their use is justified in the shielding of limited regions and when a high shielding efficiency is needed.

  42. “Low cost” magnetic materials “Electrical steels”: iron, low carbon steel alloys, silicon-iron alloys (oriented and non oriented) with a thickness of some hundreds of micrometers. • GO Si-Fe alloys: 104 • Iron low carbon steel alloys, NO Si-Fe alloys: 102103

  43. “Low cost” magnetic materials Rapidly solidified alloys: amorphous materials, nanocristalline materials, produced as ribbons with a thickness of some tens of micrometers. The initial relative permeability is: • about 105 for Co-based alloys (comparable to Ni-Fe alloys) • about 104 for Fe-based alloys

  44. Ferromagnetic shieldsInfluence of material properties • The choice of the material is connected with the specific application: • For small volumes screening (e.g. shielding of electronic devices for compatibility reasons) high quality and high cost materials can be employed (e.g. Ni-Fe alloys) • For large scale screening other materials are more useful both for economical and technical reasons (e.g. Low carbon steel, Fe-Si alloys)

  45. Ferromagnetic shields:Effect of field nonunformity =thickness, 2a=diameter Case1 Case2 Case3

  46. Closed/U-Shaped shield =thickness, L=side Case1 Case2

  47. Measurement point shield d source Measurement point shield d source Plane shield =thickness, L=side Distance of the measurement point = 0.5 L Distance of the measurement point = 0.1 L

  48. Shielding factor: Plane ferromagnetic shields:Influence of material properties

  49. shield d source y x Plane ferromagnetic shields:border effects

  50. =thickness, L=side Measurement point shield d source Measurement point shield d source U-shaped shield Distance of the measurement point = 0.5 L Distance of the measurement point = 0.1 L

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