Kratos Magnetostatic Application

(Difference between revisions)
 Revision as of 18:39, 1 February 2010 (view source)JMora (Talk | contribs)← Older edit Revision as of 18:41, 1 February 2010 (view source)JMora (Talk | contribs) (→Basic principles)Newer edit → Line 40: Line 40: By combining these Maxwell's equations, we obtain: By combining these Maxwell's equations, we obtain: − :$\vec{\nabla} \times \frac{1}{\mu} \vec{A} - \vec{J} = 0$ + :$\vec{\nabla} \times \left ( \frac{1}{\mu} \vec{\nabla} \times \vec{A} \right ) - \vec{J} = 0$ that can be reduced to the Poisson's equation for two dimension domains. that can be reduced to the Poisson's equation for two dimension domains.

General Description

The KRATOS Magnetostatic Application deals with the Finite Element Analysis of problems in magnetostatics. Though the mathematics and general formulation is quite similar to Electrostatics, Magnetostatics presents important differences at a conceptual and a programming level. Therefore, if you are a beginner in electromagnetism or programming electromagnetic applications, we strongly recommend you that you first start with the Electrostatic application.

The following description of the Kratos Magnetostatic Application takes part of:

At a first glance, it could be said that Electrostatics works with static charges whereas Magnetostatics does it with dynamic charges (or static currents). That's partially true and we avoid by now to argue about it. On the opposite, we are going to consider Magnetostatics as a completely new phenomenon instead of thinking in a kind of 'dynamic' electrostatic.

As Electrostatics, Magnetostatics establishes very basic principles of the Maxwell equations, it is an excellent work at academic level, but it is also a powerful conceptual (and eventually the resulting computing tool) to solve important industrial applications (electrical machines such as motors and transformers, circuit components such as coils, permanent magnets, sensors, magnetic field distribution, etc).

Theory

Magnetostatics[1][2][3] refers to the physical phenomena related to the presence of stationary electric currents in the objects (magnetic materials can be considered as those with internal microcurrents). That means that we ignore any electrostatic charge, the electric field and we presume a constant magnetic field with respect to time.

Basic principles

Our third Maxwell's equation:

$\vec{\nabla}\cdot\vec{B} = 0$

where:

$\vec{B} = \mu \vec{H} = \mu_0\mu_r\vec{H}$

with: $\mu, \mu_0, \mu_r \,$ the (magnetic) permeability of the medium, of the free space and relative permeability, respectively.

The magnetic field is the curl of a magnetic vector potential ($\vec{A} [Volt-seconds \; per \; metre]\,$):

$\vec{B}=\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{A}$

Our fourth Maxwell's equation:

$\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{H} = \vec{J}$

By combining these Maxwell's equations, we obtain:

$\vec{\nabla} \times \left ( \frac{1}{\mu} \vec{\nabla} \times \vec{A} \right ) - \vec{J} = 0$

that can be reduced to the Poisson's equation for two dimension domains.

Basic principles extended

Poisson's Equation in Magnetostatics

The detailed form of the Poisson's Equation[9] in Magnetostatics is:

$\frac{\partial}{\partial x}\cdot \left( \varepsilon_{x} \cdot \frac{\partial V(x,y,z)}{\partial x}\right) + \frac{\partial}{\partial y}\cdot \left(\varepsilon_{y} \cdot \frac{\partial V(x,y,z)}{\partial y} \right) + \frac{\partial}{\partial z}\cdot \left(\varepsilon_{z} \cdot \frac{\partial V(x,y,z)}{\partial z} \right) + \rho_v(x,y,z)=0$

Poisson's Equation extended

Magnetostatic Boundary Conditions

For a domain ${\Omega} \,$, we should consider three different boundary conditions:

• Dirichlet boundary condition:
$\left . V - \bar V = 0 \right |_{\Gamma_{V}}$
• Neumann boundary condition:
$\left . \hat n \vec{D} - \bar D_n = 0 \right |_{\Gamma_{q}}$
• Infinit condition (when no physical boundary are presents -free space-):
$\left . \frac{\partial V}{\partial r} \right |_{\Gamma_{\infty}} \approx - \frac{V}{r}$

Boundary Conditions extended