Magnetic Shielding for Electronics Circuits

  • Thread starter Thread starter Wannabeagenius
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Shielding
AI Thread Summary
A conductor cannot effectively shield against magnetic fields like it does for electric fields, necessitating the use of Faraday shields for certain applications. Induced magnetic fields can impact solid-state devices, particularly Hall Effect sensors and photomultipliers, which require magnetic shielding to function properly. Effective shielding is typically achieved using materials such as mumetal or permalloy, and careful design of inductors and coils can minimize unwanted magnetic interactions. The discussion includes calculations for achieving desired magnetic field reductions within shielding enclosures, emphasizing the importance of material properties and dimensions. Proper grounding strategies are also crucial to mitigate potential issues from AC magnetic fields.
Wannabeagenius
Messages
90
Reaction score
0
Hi All,

A conductor cannot shield a circuit against a magnetic field as it does for an electric field. When used in this fashion, the conductor is called a faraday shield.

In an electronics circuit, do the induced magnetic fields pose a problem and, if so, how are they handled?

Thank you,
Bob
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Some solid state devices, like Hall Effect sensors, are affected by magnetic fields. I have not had a problem with other solid state devices in low magnetic fields (a few Gauss). Some electrical devices, like photomultipliers, are verry sensitive to magnetic fields, and need magnetic shielding. Also, an ac magnetic field (dB/dt) can induce ac voltages in circuits via the Faraday Law. Be careful to minimize potential ground loops from ac transformer stray field, among other things, by planning your grounding strategy.
Bob S
 
Bob S said:
Some electrical devices, like photomultipliers, are verry sensitive to magnetic fields, and need magnetic shielding.

How is this accomplished?

Bob
 
Usually by using materials like mumetall, permalloy or similar to make a shielding enclosure.
 
Among the components most often affected by magnetic fields are those containing coils of wire, such as inductors (eg radio tuning coils), tape heads, dynamic microphones etc.

The effect can be quite pronounced with an unscreened winding - this is utilised to advantage in such things as ferrite bar antennas for radio receivers, metal detector search coils, tape heads and many other devices.

Screening can help to reduce unwanted pickup, as can giving the inductor a closed magnetic circuit (eg in a pot core coil). Perfectly toroidal windings theoretically don't emit or pick up magnetic fields, and finally carefully positioning coils within equipment can minimise interactions.
 
Wannabeagenius said:
How is this accomplished?
Here is a brief tutorial on magnetic shielding without illustration.

Suppose the magnetic field outside a soft iron shield were 10 Gauss, and we need to have 0.1 Gauss inside for a photomultiplier; i.e., a 100 times reduction

Consider external field B1 perpendicular to the axis of a cylindrical soft iron shield of diameter D. The flux 2·B1·D is concentrated in the iron shield itself at midpoint.
B is continuous because div·B = 0
If the shield has a thickness t then
B2 = (D/t)·B1 in the iron
This should not exceed 10,000 Gauss for soft iron, 2,000 Gauss for mumetal. So in this example using soft iron with B1= 10 Gauss, t>= 0.001·D (one of two limits)
Now, If we want B3= 0.1 Gauss (inside shield)
B3=B2r because H-parallel is continuous; Curl H = 0
where μr is relative permeability, assume 2500 for soft iron
So B2 in iron must not exceed 250 Gauss
So t>=D/25

Try same calculation with mumetal.

Bob S
 
While I was rolling out a shielded cable, a though came to my mind - what happens to the current flow in the cable if there came a short between the wire and the shield in both ends of the cable? For simplicity, lets assume a 1-wire copper wire wrapped in an aluminum shield. The wire and the shield has the same cross section area. There are insulating material between them, and in both ends there is a short between them. My first thought, the total resistance of the cable would be reduced...
Hey guys. I have a question related to electricity and alternating current. Say an alien fictional society developed electricity, and settled on a standard like 73V AC current at 46 Hz. How would appliances be designed, and what impact would the lower frequency and voltage have on transformers, wiring, TVs, computers, LEDs, motors, and heating, assuming the laws of physics and technology are the same as on Earth?
Hi all I have some confusion about piezoelectrical sensors combination. If i have three acoustic piezoelectrical sensors (with same receive sensitivity in dB ref V/1uPa) placed at specific distance, these sensors receive acoustic signal from a sound source placed at far field distance (Plane Wave) and from broadside. I receive output of these sensors through individual preamplifiers, add them through hardware like summer circuit adder or in software after digitization and in this way got an...
Back
Top