Recent content by tm64
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Computational project ideas for magnetic materials?
awesome, thanks for the idea. seems straight forward enough and there's plenty of info on this page also sounds like an interesting idea, thanks- tm64
- Post #4
- Forum: Materials and Chemical Engineering
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Computational project ideas for magnetic materials?
For my end-of-semester project, I was tasked to investigate an aspect of magnetism/magnetic materials, to do some literature review on the topic, and code a mathematical model and display my results graphically. I couldn't find anything I wanted to do, so I asked the professor to assign me a...- tm64
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- Computational Ideas Magnetic Magnetic materials Materials Project Project ideas
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Materials and Chemical Engineering
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Skin depth of multilayered (2-layer) wire
Yikes, that's a huge paper, but definitely seems pretty relevant. Hopefully I'll have enough time to skim through it- tm64
- Post #7
- Forum: Electrical Engineering
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Skin depth of multilayered (2-layer) wire
Interesting idea, I'll definitely take a look into that. And yeah, a lot of this math does look pretty gnarly unfortunately. I'm trying to think of a way to model it computationally, perhaps that will make things a bit more straightforward, but I'll have to put more thought into it. Thanks for...- tm64
- Post #6
- Forum: Electrical Engineering
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Skin depth of multilayered (2-layer) wire
Thanks for the reply, that makes sense. So, in this case, would the current density mostly be concentrated in the non-oxidized conductor, with a skin depth similar to that as if the oxide layer weren't there? I would also be interested in the situation of the outer layer being conductive as...- tm64
- Post #5
- Forum: Electrical Engineering
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Skin depth of multilayered (2-layer) wire
Homework Statement:: Not a specific question, more just a conceptual clarification for a project. But generally: What is an equation for the effective skin depth of a multilayered (in this case only 2 layers) wire, as a function of the resistivities and relative permeabilities of both of the...- tm64
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- Depth Skin Skin depth Wire
- Replies: 9
- Forum: Electrical Engineering