Maria Roberta Longhitano, Fabien Sixdenier, Riccardo Scorretti, Laurent Krähenbühl and Christophe Geuzaine
To understand the behavior of the magnetization processes in ferromagnetic materials in function of temperature, a temperature-dependent hysteresis model is necessary. This study…
Abstract
Purpose
To understand the behavior of the magnetization processes in ferromagnetic materials in function of temperature, a temperature-dependent hysteresis model is necessary. This study aims to investigate how temperature can be accounted for in the energy-based hysteresis model, via an appropriate parameter identification and interpolation procedure.
Design/methodology/approach
The hysteresis model used for simulating the material response is energy-consistent and relies on thermodynamic principles. The material parameters have been identified by unidirectional alternating measurements, and the model has been tested for both simple and complex excitation waveforms. Measurements and simulations have been performed on a soft ferrite toroidal sample characterized in a wide temperature range.
Findings
The analysis shows that the model is able to represent accurately arbitrary excitation waveforms in function of temperature. The identification method used to determine the model parameters has proven its robustness: starting from simple excitation waveforms, the complex ones can be simulated precisely.
Research limitations/implications
As parameters vary depending on temperature, a new parameter variation law in function of temperature has been proposed.
Practical implications
A complete static hysteresis model able to take the temperature into account is now available. The identification is quite simple and requires very few measurements at different temperatures.
Originality/value
The results suggest that it is possible to predict magnetization curves within the measured range, starting from a reduced set of measured data.
Details
Keywords
Riccardo Scorretti, Ronan Perrussel, Laurent Morel, Noël Burais and Laurent Nicolas
The classical ϕ‐a formulations for numerical dosimetry of currents induced by extremely low frequency magnetic fields requires that the source field is provided through a vector…
Abstract
Purpose
The classical ϕ‐a formulations for numerical dosimetry of currents induced by extremely low frequency magnetic fields requires that the source field is provided through a vector potential. The purpose of this paper is to present a new formulation t‐b which directly takes the flux density as source term.
Design/methodology/approach
This formulation is implemented through finite element and validated by comparison with analytical solutions. The results obtained by both formulations are compared in the case of an anatomical computational phantom exposed to a vertical uniform field.
Findings
A good agreement between the t‐b formulation and both numerical and analytical computations was found.
Originality/value
This new formulation seems to be more accurate than the ϕ‐a formulation, and is more suited for situations where the magnetic field is known from experimental measurements, as there is no need for a magnetic vector potential.