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Posted:
5 years ago
9 août 2019, 10:59 UTC−4
Updated:
5 years ago
9 août 2019, 10:58 UTC−4
Some COMSOL modules (including the mf, or magnetic fields module) have a small signal analysis, frequency domain option as one of the studies.
This is what you want.
D.W. Greve
DWGreve Consulting
Some COMSOL modules (including the mf, or magnetic fields module) have a *small signal analysis, frequency domain* option as one of the studies.
This is what you want.
D.W. Greve
DWGreve Consulting
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Posted:
5 years ago
19 août 2019, 09:28 UTC−4
Updated:
5 years ago
20 août 2019, 02:10 UTC−4
Hi,
Firstly, I thank you for the reply. Actually I want to define the non-linear magnetic material by giving BH curve under the material section for a problem to be solved in frequency domain. But when i am running the solver it shows a error that "use effective BH curve in the frequency domain". (error is shown in the image)
Then I tried to create a effective BH curve from the original BH curve by using " Effective Nonlinear Magnetic Curves Calculator App" . Now in the post processing, theoretically the results should be in accordance with the original BH curve. But the results are following effective BH curve. Can you give suggestions to this problem?
Hi,
Firstly, I thank you for the reply. Actually I want to define the non-linear magnetic material by giving BH curve under the material section for a problem to be solved in frequency domain. But when i am running the solver it shows a error that "use effective BH curve in the frequency domain". (error is shown in the image)
Then I tried to create a effective BH curve from the original BH curve by using " Effective Nonlinear Magnetic Curves Calculator App" . Now in the post processing, theoretically the results should be in accordance with the original BH curve. But the results are following effective BH curve. Can you give suggestions to this problem?
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Posted:
5 years ago
24 janv. 2020, 11:01 UTC−5
Hi,
I have the same problem. I think there is something should be done in the study step. Have you sorted it out? I tried the information in the following link but it didn't work.
https://uk.comsol.com/model/download/684901/Effective_HB_or_BH_Curve_Comparison_55.pdf
Regards
Wael
Hi,
I have the same problem. I think there is something should be done in the study step. Have you sorted it out? I tried the information in the following link but it didn't work.
https://uk.comsol.com/model/download/684901/Effective_HB_or_BH_Curve_Comparison_55.pdf
Regards
Wael
Lars Dammann
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
5 years ago
30 janv. 2020, 10:13 UTC−5
Hi,
it is not really possible to compute nonlinear magnetic materials in the frequency domain. The frequency domain approach makes the assumption that the entire solution has the time dependence , but this is simply not true for nonlinear materials. If you put a nonlinear iron yoke in a coil, which is driven by a sinusoidal current, the resulting magnetic field will not be sinusoidal. The effective BH-curve tries to approximate the real fields in the nonlinear material by evening-out the error over the time period, but it is still a simplification.
If you need the exact fields at all times, you should perform a time-dependent simulation. See this model for an example: https://www.comsol.com/model/e-core-transformer-14123
Dave is right though, that you can perform a small signal analysis, if your harmonic excitation is so small, that the fields only covers a very small part of the BH-curve such that the problem can be linearized.
Hope this helps,
Lars
Hi,
it is not really possible to compute nonlinear magnetic materials in the frequency domain. The frequency domain approach makes the assumption that the entire solution has the time dependence A=\tilde{A}\cdot\exp(j\,\omega\,t), but this is simply not true for nonlinear materials. If you put a nonlinear iron yoke in a coil, which is driven by a sinusoidal current, the resulting magnetic field will not be sinusoidal. The effective BH-curve tries to approximate the real fields in the nonlinear material by evening-out the error over the time period, but it is still a simplification.
If you need the exact fields at all times, you should perform a time-dependent simulation. See this model for an example: https://www.comsol.com/model/e-core-transformer-14123
Dave is right though, that you can perform a small signal analysis, if your harmonic excitation is so small, that the fields only covers a very small part of the BH-curve such that the problem can be linearized.
Hope this helps,
Lars