Permeability
The nonlinearity of material permeability
may be graphed for better understanding. We'll place the quantity of field
intensity (H), equal to field force (mmf) divided by the length of the
material, on the horizontal axis of the graph. On the vertical axis, we'll
place the quantity of flux density (B), equal to total flux divided by the
cross-sectional area of the material. We will use the quantities of field intensity
(H) and flux density (B) instead of field force (mmf) and total flux (Φ) so
that the shape of our graph remains independent of the physical dimensions of
our test material. What we're trying to do here is show a mathematical
relationship between field force and flux for any chunk of a particular
substance, in the same spirit as describing a material's specific resistance in
ohm-cmil/ft instead of its actual resistance in ohms.
This is called the normal magnetization
curve, or B-H curve, for any particular material. Notice how the flux density
for any of the above materials (cast iron, cast steel, and sheet steel) levels
off with increasing amounts of field intensity. This effect is known as
saturation. When there is little applied magnetic force (low H), only a few
atoms are in alignment, and the rest are easily aligned with additional force.
However, as more flux gets crammed into the same cross-sectional area of a
ferromagnetic material, fewer atoms are available within that material to align
their electrons with additional force, and so it takes more and more force (H)
to get less and less "help" from the material in creating more flux
density (B). To put this in economic terms, we're seeing a case of diminishing
returns (B) on our investment (H). Saturation is a phenomenon limited to
iron-core electromagnets. Air-core electromagnets don't saturate, but on the
other hand they don't produce nearly as much magnetic flux as a ferromagnetic
core for the same number of wire turns and current.
No comments:
Post a Comment