Throughts about the MEG principle ( Part 2 )

By Cyril Smith

created on 11-12-00 - JLN Labs - last update on 11-12-00


Subject : MEG Theory and thoughts
Date : 12/11/00 11:28:51 Paris, Madrid
From:    cyrilsmith@camelot64.fsnet.co.uk (Cyril Smith)

Hi All,  

Cross Flux MEG.  I can't see how cross flux will work with the exotic nanoperm and metglas materials.  In my simple mind these get their terrific BH characteristics because they are highly anisotropic, the atomic dipoles are all aligned in the one direction.  Thus they would have no useful BH characteristic in the cross flux direction, they would simply look like air.  There is no internal mechanism for cross flux control.  Statements like Fred has turned up "when a material is saturated in one direction it is not saturated in other orthogonal directions" are true only for isotropic materials.  Remember the atomic magnetic dipoles are fixed in the crystal lattice, they do not wiggle about.  They can and do flip polarity and it is this feature which accounts for permeability.   Imagine say 360 co-located dipoles each one aligned 1 degree different to its neighbour.  We have a net dipole moment of zero.   Now apply a slowly increasing magnetising force along say the 0 degree axis.  First the 180 degree dipole will switch, then the 179 and 181 degree ones, then the 178 and 182 ones and so on.  You will see that the net magnetisation gradually increases until saturation is reached where there are no more dipoles available.  Plot magnetisation*munought against magnetising force and you have B v. H, in the chosen 0 degree direction.

There will be no magnetisation in the 90 degree direction.  Now apply a slowly increasing magnetising force in this new direction, keeping the original 0 degree H force present.  Again you will see dipoles switching direction to give 90 degree magnetisation, but some of these were contributing to the 0 degree magnetisation, so this value will fall.  Thus you can only get the 90 degree magnetisation at the expense of 0 degree magnetisation.  This is the cross flux control mechanism.  If all the dipoles are fixed in the one alignment there is no cross flux control available.  GO steel will not be highly anisotropic, so here there will be some cross flux control.

Now to the non cross flux MEG.  Something  Dave D said about flux lines leaving the core rang some bells.  It strikes me that flux lines can and must leave the core, even a complete magnetic circuit like a ring core.  In the MEG the flux lines from the magnet do so.  And it is obvious to me that if you wound two identical coils on opposite limbs of a ring core, passed current through these in cancelling mode, you would have flux lines leaving the core.  This would simply be two banana shaped electromagnets placed in parallel, the ring core would have N and S poles opposite each other.

And going back to my description of the domain wall moving along the core, opposite sides of the wall have opposite polarity, so the wall is a magnetic pole.  The flux must escape radially from the core at this point.  This raises an interesting debate concerning transfromer action.  In the attached gif the top picture shows the usual interpretation for transformer induction.  The B lines through the core are continuous, they change with time to induce voltage in the coil.  This is the induction theory we all love or hate.  My second picture shows what I believe is happening inside an anisotropic core like metglas, nanoperm and others.  I show here just one domain wall because that is what happens in the MEG.  The B field can not be continuous through the core because the magnetisation each side of the wall is of opposite polarity.  So the B lines escape.  Now to get the voltage induced in the core we need something different from our usual formulae.  Maybe this is the route to understanding ou.

I gave a formula for the A field due to a domain wall, and this could be used for the induced voltage if the domain velocity is known (you would have to integrate over the length of the coil).  The domain velocity can be controlled by the driving waveform (after all it is possible for the wall to be held stationary with suitable DC, it doesn't just move by itself).  So at low frequencies, and for coils wound over significant lengths of the core (which you would normally do for power transformers), the B induction would be seen to obey normal transformer rules.  But at higher frequencies there will be a velocity limit set by the material.  I have seen on Aspden's site an analysis for the Hans Coler machine where he equates domain velocity to stress waves (acoustic velocity) in the material.  I bow to Aspden's superior knowledge, and would point out that the 40kHz frequency for Bearden's MEG is not unreasonable for this velocity.

Finally I have available some ferrite ring and C cores.  Some of the ring cores are square loop (with the magnetostriction effect which can shatter the core of driven at mechanical resonance).  Others are not.  I will experiment with the MEG coil configuration, and with the core placed between my two big slab magnets.  When I get time, which will probably be into December.

Best regards

Cyril Smith
  cyrilsmith@camelot64.fsnet.co.uk


Sujet : MEG
Date : 12/11/00 11:28:07 Paris, Madrid
From:    cyrilsmith@camelot64.fsnet.co.uk (Cyril Smitht

The gif above shows the phasor diagram for a transformer.  The fluxes from the primary and secondary currents almost cancel, but not quite.  What remains is the actual flux in the core which drives the emf's.  The secondary current (and flux vector) is in phase with the induced emf (because the load is resistive).  The primary current (and flux vector) is almost in phase with the induced emf, so the primary impedance as seen by the input source is almost resistive: the small phase angle here is the inductive component needed to "create" the actual flux.  As you reduce the load resistance you get greater primary and secondary current, so these two flux vectors get bigger (assuming the source can drive the increased power). But you can't do this ad infinitum.  The power transfer limit is reached, not by the core's ability to carry the flux (for a given voltage the flux swing is constant, independant of the power transferred), but by the copper losses.

The above is for classical transformer design.  With the MEG, I am not so sure that classical procedures apply, as you will see from my other mails.

Regards
Cyril Smith
 
cyrilsmith@camelot64.fsnet.co.uk

Read the previous paper from Cyril Smith


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