Sven Friedel
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
10 years ago
22 mag 2015, 10:30 GMT-4
Dear Arda,
please note that the Lorentz term formulation has indeed the described limitations.
If you want to model more complex scenarios as the one you describe you may want to tke
the following tutorial as a reference:
ch.comsol.com/model/voltage-induced-in-a-coil-by-a-moving-magnet-14163
I uses the moving mesh interface and handles the equations in a similary way as do the
rotating machinery interfaces for generators and motors where you have not the
limitations of the Lorentz term approach.
Best regards,
Sven
Dear Arda,
please note that the Lorentz term formulation has indeed the described limitations.
If you want to model more complex scenarios as the one you describe you may want to tke
the following tutorial as a reference:
https://ch.comsol.com/model/voltage-induced-in-a-coil-by-a-moving-magnet-14163
I uses the moving mesh interface and handles the equations in a similary way as do the
rotating machinery interfaces for generators and motors where you have not the
limitations of the Lorentz term approach.
Best regards,
Sven
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
10 years ago
22 mag 2015, 10:51 GMT-4
Dear Sven
Thank you very much for your reply! It is a very helpful tutorial you have mentioned, showing the option of a moving mesh. However, I would once more like to inquire about the possibility of having a model without moving mesh.
Coming back to the tutorial about magnet falling through copper tube where the Lorentz term is used, would Lorentz term be applicable if the tube was made of magnetic material such as steel (with relative peremability of, say, 1000 instead of 1)? Or -in a further step- a material with nonlinear (single-valued) BH curve?
Even in the most complicated example I mentioned earlier (where the magnet is replaced by AC current-carying coils - coils are fixed in position), there is no moving magnet, therefore I wanted to respectfully post this follow-up question inquiring whether the Lorentz term could be used when the magnetic field applied to the tube (made of iron or copper) changes in time.
Therefore, I would be happy if you could please comment on the applicability of the Lorentz term in the above mentioned three cases, summarized as:
1) when permeability of tube >>1
2) when nonlinear BH curve of tube
3) time dependent field being applied the tube
Thank you very much again, for looking into this case. It is greatly appreciated.
Best regards
Dear Sven
Thank you very much for your reply! It is a very helpful tutorial you have mentioned, showing the option of a moving mesh. However, I would once more like to inquire about the possibility of having a model without moving mesh.
Coming back to the tutorial about magnet falling through copper tube where the Lorentz term is used, would Lorentz term be applicable if the tube was made of magnetic material such as steel (with relative peremability of, say, 1000 instead of 1)? Or -in a further step- a material with nonlinear (single-valued) BH curve?
Even in the most complicated example I mentioned earlier (where the magnet is replaced by AC current-carying coils - coils are fixed in position), there is no moving magnet, therefore I wanted to respectfully post this follow-up question inquiring whether the Lorentz term could be used when the magnetic field applied to the tube (made of iron or copper) changes in time.
Therefore, I would be happy if you could please comment on the applicability of the Lorentz term in the above mentioned three cases, summarized as:
1) when permeability of tube >>1
2) when nonlinear BH curve of tube
3) time dependent field being applied the tube
Thank you very much again, for looking into this case. It is greatly appreciated.
Best regards
Sven Friedel
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
10 years ago
22 mag 2015, 11:16 GMT-4
Dear Arda,
please find my answers in your support case.
Best regards,
Sven
Dear Arda,
please find my answers in your support case.
Best regards,
Sven
Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
10 years ago
22 mag 2015, 12:48 GMT-4
Hi Sven, Arda,
why not going ahead with this thread in the forum? The applicability of the Lorentz term is a very interesting subject to many COMSOL users.
Cheers
Edgar
--
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
Hi Sven, Arda,
why not going ahead with this thread in the forum? The applicability of the Lorentz term is a very interesting subject to many COMSOL users.
Cheers
Edgar
--
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
http://www.emphys.com
Sven Friedel
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
10 years ago
22 mag 2015, 13:41 GMT-4
Hallo Edgar,
schön wieder mal von Dir zu hören! And you are right - let's continue:
Moving magnetic sources (permanent magnets, magnetized materials, etc.) induce an electric field due to Faraday's Law, so they cannot be modeled using the Lorentz term only in the moving region. A "correction" that takes into account the induced field would need to be added. Also, since the mesh is not really moving, the Lorentz term is only applicable for "steady state" movements (this is the meaning of "domains invariant in the direction of motion").
Permeable or saturable materials would exhibit an induced magnetization. In general one cannot use the Lorentz term for a iron tube since the moving magnetic sources induced in the tube would in turn induce an electric field in the surrounding region, which is not modeled by the Lorentz term feature.
So for all those cases that Arda described - a thorough formulation using a moving mesh would be appropriate.
Kind regards and Schöne Pfingsten!
Sven Friedel
Hallo Edgar,
schön wieder mal von Dir zu hören! And you are right - let's continue:
Moving magnetic sources (permanent magnets, magnetized materials, etc.) induce an electric field due to Faraday's Law, so they cannot be modeled using the Lorentz term only in the moving region. A "correction" that takes into account the induced field would need to be added. Also, since the mesh is not really moving, the Lorentz term is only applicable for "steady state" movements (this is the meaning of "domains invariant in the direction of motion").
Permeable or saturable materials would exhibit an induced magnetization. In general one cannot use the Lorentz term for a iron tube since the moving magnetic sources induced in the tube would in turn induce an electric field in the surrounding region, which is not modeled by the Lorentz term feature.
So for all those cases that Arda described - a thorough formulation using a moving mesh would be appropriate.
Kind regards and Schöne Pfingsten!
Sven Friedel