Which of these magnets should have the strongest strength at 10cm?

AI Thread Summary
To generate the strongest magnetic field at 10 cm from a circular magnet, the discussion evaluates different magnet types: a large flat magnet, a smaller thick magnet, and a mid-sized magnet with high suction claims. The effectiveness of single-sided shielded magnets versus unshielded ones at distance is questioned, with suggestions that a horseshoe or bar magnet might be more suitable for achieving a strong field. The application involves stimulating H+ ions in biological tissues, requiring a magnetic field of at least 200 Gauss at the specified distance. The complexity of achieving a uniform field is acknowledged, emphasizing the need for careful consideration of magnet geometry and placement. The conversation highlights the importance of providing detailed project information to receive relevant advice.
coquelicot
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Basically, I need to generate the strongest possible field at 10 cm from a circular magnet, in its central axis.
I hesitate about what buying.

For example, the following magnet has a large diameter of 90mm and is flat, with a suction of 250 kg.

large_flat_magnet.jpg

This other magnet has a smaller diameter of 60mm, but is thicker (40 mm) with a suction of 250 kg too.

thick_magnet.jpg


This last magnet has dimension somewhere between the two others (diam = 75mm), but it is advertised to have an incredible suction of 800 kg (which I suspect to be wrong, as AliExpress is not the most reliable place should I say).

very_strong_magnet.jpg


My question is: what is best suitable for a B-field at 10 cm: a large diameter flat magnet, a not so large diameter thick magnet, or simply the strongest possible suction magnet (of course, in general, the more the suction, the more the B-field, but there may be a trade-off with the other parameters).

Also, the two first magnets are single sided (the shield on the other side leads the B-field lines directly to the first side) in order to increase the suction. But I'm not sure this increases the B-field at 10 cm far; in fact, this may well be the contrary. So, my second question is: is a shielded single side magnet stronger than the same magnet without shield, at some distance from the magnet?
 
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coquelicot said:
Summary:: strength of magnets at some distance

Also, the two first magnets are single sided (the shield on the other side leads the B-field lines directly to the first side) in order to increase the suction. But I'm not sure this increases the B-field at 10 cm far; in fact, this may well be the contrary.
Yeah, to get much of a field 10cm away, you do not want to use a magnet that is optimized for sticking to metal like those are. You need the poles to be farther away from each other like a horseshoe magnet.

You could also use a bar magnet with a couple pieces of metal stuck to the ends and coming out to make two poles that face each other. Is your wish to have a pretty flat field in some volume 10cm away? How big of a volume?
 
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coquelicot said:
Summary:: strength of magnets at some distance

I hesitate about what buying.
Is magnet fishing your application? If yes, then a constant distance of 10 cm should not be your criterion.
 
anorlunda said:
Is magnet fishing your application? If yes, then a constant distance of 10 cm should not be your criterion.
What's magnet fishing? Fishing for magnets, or catching some kind of fish with magnets?
 
Please, don't mock. I want these magnets because they are very strong and relatively cheap. That's for a physics application: observing the Larmor frequency of H+ ions.

Berkeman: Yes, ideally, I would like a uniform field in a volume of radius 10cm and thickness 5 cm at least, but it appears to be difficult. I will content myself with a not very uniform field. But I need a strong field, at least of the order of 200 Gauss. That's not easy unless you spend a lot of money.
 
I don't think anybody is mocking. You just didn't say anything about your application, so we are having to guess to try to be helpful.

So you have a vacuum chamber with a beam source of H+ ions, and want to have a B field in the vacuum chamber to observe/measure the Lamor motion? What material is the vacuum chamber?
 
No. I want to stimulate the ions inside biological tissues, like in nuclear magnetic resonance. But I cannot stick the magnets to the tissues because of the physical geometry of my apparatus. So, I have to put it 10cm far away.
 
What level of B-field are you wanting to generate at that 10cm distance?
 
1000 Gauss: very good
500 Gauss: good
300 Gauss: passable
100 Gauss: bad but will try
 
  • #10
coquelicot said:
No. I want to stimulate the ions inside biological tissues, like in nuclear magnetic resonance. But I cannot stick the magnets to the tissues because of the physical geometry of my apparatus. So, I have to put it 10cm far away.
Can you say more about the shape of the tissues that you want to have in the test zone? Like, is it the front surface of a large body (like the abdomen of a person), or a fingertip, or an arm, etc. If it is possible to have the test volume between two magnet poles, that will help to increase the field you can achieve quite a bit, IMO. I'm thinking of the magnet geometry like in the drawing below, but with the sample volume where the "SN" block is shown...

https://openstax.org/books/physics/pages/20-1-magnetic-fields-field-lines-and-force

1613066407166.png
 
  • #11
coquelicot said:
No. I want to stimulate the ions inside biological tissues, like in nuclear magnetic resonance. But I cannot stick the magnets to the tissues because of the physical geometry of my apparatus.

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance has been around for seventy years, and the cyclotron longer than that. The usual method for producing the required large uniform field is two flat (or slightly curved) pole faces separated by less than their radius.
You will not produce anything like that level of uniformity with a different geometry. The NMR imaging machines produce a known huge inhomogeneous field and then use computed tomography to figure it all out.
So do you just want to make something move or do you need the uniformity to reach a desired signal to noise ratio? Clearly this needs a little more description if we are to be of utility. Speak, please.

'
 
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  • #12
berkeman said:
bar magnet with a couple pieces of metal stuck to the ends and coming out to make two poles that face each other
Or a geometry like this.
1856146.jpg
 
  • #13
I'm not sticking my head in that thing! :oops:
 
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  • #14
I am not trying to do nuclear magnetic imaging, but something related and much simpler: to excite the H+ ions with RF coils and to receive their emission at the Larmor frequency with another RF coil. Unfortunately, I cannot describe all my project here. It suffice to say that I'm limited regarding what can be put near the experiments, and only a magnetic field from the bottom of the cup will fit (actually, I still have a big coil around the cup, but the field is not sufficient). What about simply trying to answer the question :-) ?
 
  • #15
coquelicot said:
What about simply trying to answer the question :-) ?
Which question? And I don't think you've answered my question about if you can put poles on both sides of the tissue sample...
 
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  • #16
Oh, I missed it. No I cannot put poles on both sides because there are other things above (I cannot describe here all the project). Also, it will not be possible to put two poles laterally, because I need the B field be directed from bottom to top (or the contrary).

The question is what I asked at the beginning regarding magnets.
 
  • #17
berkeman said:
What's magnet fishing? Fishing for magnets, or catching some kind of fish with magnets?
It's a surprisingly popular hobby. Lots of videos on Youtube like this one. For that hobby, they sell strong magnets with eyes exactly like the ones shown in the OP.

1613072938011.png
 
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  • #18
coquelicot said:
I am not trying to do nuclear magnetic imaging, but something related and much simpler: to excite the H+ ions with RF coils and to receive their emission at the Larmor frequency with another RF coil
In my world that is called NMR (spectroscopy is added sometimes). The required signal to noise is not trivial. Here is the paper that won the 1952 Nobel Prize:
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~phys191r/References/c4/bloembergen1948.pdf
This is pretty well investigated stuff. Very interesting but not easy.
 
  • #19
coquelicot said:
What about simply trying to answer the question :-) ?

we cannot because of this ...

coquelicot said:
Unfortunately, I cannot describe all my project here

as has been indicated...
The quality of peoples answers directly relates to the quality of the information you give
 
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  • #20
hutchphd. Thank you so many for this paper. I will read it with avidity.
 
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