Is there a solution for magnetic field interference in cables?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the effects of strong magnetic fields (1-2 Tesla) on various types of cables, including standard current wires, USB, Ethernet, coaxial, and twisted pair cables. Participants explore the potential for interference, data transmission capabilities, and the effectiveness of different cable designs in mitigating magnetic field influence.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants inquire whether there are cables that remain unaffected by magnetic fields of 1-2 Tesla, specifically in the context of IRM machines.
  • Others suggest that coaxial and twisted pair cables are designed to minimize electromagnetic interference, with twisted pairs being particularly effective due to their construction.
  • A participant questions the vulnerability of coaxial cables, noting their data transmission method and expressing uncertainty about their susceptibility to electromagnetic influence.
  • It is mentioned that the rate of change of the magnetic field is more significant than the absolute strength, with some claiming twisted pairs can be used in pulsed magnetic fields of much higher strength than 1-2 Tesla.
  • Some participants discuss the importance of keeping the area enclosed by the wires small to reduce induced voltages, referencing Faraday's law.
  • Optical fiber is proposed by multiple participants as a solution that is immune to magnetic and electric fields.
  • Concerns are raised about the movement of cables within a magnetic field and the potential for induced voltages due to field gradients.
  • One participant shares a practical method for creating twisted pairs from standard wire, emphasizing the DIY aspect of cable preparation.
  • Another participant mentions that while twisted pairs can help, they doubt the effectiveness of shielded cables against magnetic fields and suggest using ferrous metal conduits instead.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the effectiveness of different cable types in strong magnetic fields, with no consensus reached on a definitive solution. There is ongoing debate about the impact of static versus dynamic fields and the specific conditions under which various cables perform best.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the effectiveness of cables may depend on factors such as the frequency of the magnetic field, the physical arrangement of the wires, and the specific application context (e.g., IRM machines). Some assumptions about the nature of the magnetic fields and their effects on different cable types remain unresolved.

Patokun
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Hello all,

Are there any cables that are immune and not affected by magnetic fields of the strength of 1-2 Tesla? Either simple current wires, or more complex ones like USB or Ethernet cables.
 
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You mean cables that don't pick up electromagnetic noise or induced voltages when you ramp the field?

A static field should not have much effect anyways.

Coaxial or triaxial (ground shield around signal- and signal+) are best, second best are twisted pairs, shielded if necessary.
 
I don't think its static. It's a field similar to ones that are found in IRM machines. (As far as I know those are electromagnetic)

Don't coaxial cables transmit data using magnetic fields? I thought that would make them more vulnerable to an electromagnetic influence. (Then again, I don't know much about that)

I knew twisted pairs are good at resisting magnetic influence, but I was wondering if they can do that with fields as strong as 1-2 Tesla?

Thank you for the help!
 
Patokun said:
I don't think its static. It's a field similar to ones that are found in IRM machines. (As far as I know those are electromagnetic)

Don't coaxial cables transmit data using magnetic fields? I thought that would make them more vulnerable to an electromagnetic influence. (Then again, I don't know much about that)
It is the EM wave that propagate down the coax line.
I knew twisted pairs are good at resisting magnetic influence, but I was wondering if they can do that with fields as strong as 1-2 Tesla?

Thank you for the help!

I don't think you induce EMF unless you have the cable formingf a loop as per Faraday's law.
Also it depend on the frequency of the magnetic field ( which is EM when it is varying as E and B coupled by Maxwell's equation). For high frequency, people put a toroid on the cable to break the loop.
 
the idea is to keep the area enclosed by the wires as small as possible.

A tesla is a weber per square meter and if you keep the square meters miniscule there's not a lot of milliwebers coupling the loop. Twisting helps the induction in each segment cancel that in the preceding one.

That's the very basics in simple terms. Yungman is expert.

How are you getting that sort of field in air?

What is this IRM, some kind of rolling machine ?
 
Patokun said:
I don't think its static. It's a field similar to ones that are found in IRM machines. (As far as I know those are electromagnetic)
At 1-2T this is bound to be superconducting magnets (or permanent over a very very small volume). The main field will vary only very slowly, on a time scale of minutes. The induced voltages will be minimal.

However, you should make sure that your cables do not move in the field, as it will have a strong gradient.

Don't coaxial cables transmit data using magnetic fields? I thought that would make them more vulnerable to an electromagnetic influence. (Then again, I don't know much about that)
At very high frequencies (MHz) yes. But you can perfectly well use coax cables for low frequencies and DC, then the magnetic part can be neglected.

In any case, even in a static (or slowly varying) background field you can still use coax cables to transmit high frequency signals.

I knew twisted pairs are good at resisting magnetic influence, but I was wondering if they can do that with fields as strong as 1-2 Tesla?

Yes. The rate of change is more important than the absolute field strength. I know people that use twisted pairs (and also coaxial cables) in pulsed magnetic fields of 60T and more. Make sure the twist is nice and tight, with as little space between the wires as possible, and that the pitch is regular.

Note also that your magnet will have 1-2 T in the field center. The further you go away from that, the lower the stray field will be. IMR machines sometimes are compensated such that the stray field is very small.

Thank you for the help!

NP
 
The best magnetic/electric field immune cable I know of is optical fibre

Dave
 
davenn said:
The best magnetic/electric field immune cable I know of is optical fibre

Dave

:smile::smile:
 
jim hardy said:
the idea is to keep the area enclosed by the wires as small as possible.

A tesla is a weber per square meter and if you keep the square meters miniscule there's not a lot of milliwebers coupling the loop. Twisting helps the induction in each segment cancel that in the preceding one.

That's the very basics in simple terms. Yungman is expert.

How are you getting that sort of field in air?

What is this IRM, some kind of rolling machine ?

No it is not. We're simply doing some wiring for some equipment in the IRM room, and although the equipment is sealed inside magnetic insulation boxes, the wiring is not yet done.

yungman said:
I don't think you induce EMF unless you have the cable formingf a loop as per Faraday's law.
Also it depend on the frequency of the magnetic field ( which is EM when it is varying as E and B coupled by Maxwell's equation). For high frequency, people put a toroid on the cable to break the loop.

M Quack said:
At 1-2T this is bound to be superconducting magnets (or permanent over a very very small volume). The main field will vary only very slowly, on a time scale of minutes. The induced voltages will be minimal.

However, you should make sure that your cables do not move in the field, as it will have a strong gradient.At very high frequencies (MHz) yes. But you can perfectly well use coax cables for low frequencies and DC, then the magnetic part can be neglected.

In any case, even in a static (or slowly varying) background field you can still use coax cables to transmit high frequency signals.
Yes. The rate of change is more important than the absolute field strength. I know people that use twisted pairs (and also coaxial cables) in pulsed magnetic fields of 60T and more. Make sure the twist is nice and tight, with as little space between the wires as possible, and that the pitch is regular.

Note also that your magnet will have 1-2 T in the field center. The further you go away from that, the lower the stray field will be. IMR machines sometimes are compensated such that the stray field is very small.

NP

I have to admit I am feeling out of my league here @_@

I've got no idea how the IRM field works, but I'm going to trust you on that one. 60T, wow >_>

I can't test directly on the IRM for now, but I got a loudspeaker magnet that looks like this one, which I heard has around 1-2T magnetic field, but I have no idea if the field it makes is similar to the one found in an IRM. I know it wrecked havoc on an old CRT screen I have.

Do twisted pairs have to be those of Ethernet, do I have to use an Ethernet card to use it? Or can I transmit data on the wires like they were normal copper wires? Is it for the same for coaxial cables? If yes, then my problem will be solved! I'll just buy cat6 cable and strip the ends and use that.

davenn said:
The best magnetic/electric field immune cable I know of is optical fibre

Dave

Yeah but the encoders/decoders of those cost a fortune ~.~

For such a distance and the really low bandwidth we have it's not really worth it.
And thank you all for the replies!
 
  • #10
For computing, you will be fine with standard, off-the-shelf cabling. Mains are no problem at all.

For sensitive instrumentation, try to go with coax or twisted pairs, and above all avoid ground loops.

Everything else is probably overkill for your case.
 
  • #11
Get any cheap two wires pair from the store, then pull out the length you need. Make sure you have extra length, secure one end. Then use an electric drill and fix the other end on the chuck and turn the drill on to twist the pair. Make sure you pull tight to prevent from tangling. We did that all the time to make twisted pairs.
 
Last edited:
  • #12
Magnetic fields pass easily through nonferrous metals. Using twisted pair will help but I don't think shielded cable will do much. Have you considered conduit made out of a ferrous metal.
 

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