Salvador12
Full Member level 4

Imagine there is a wire that passes by an area that has magnetic flux in it. My goal is to shield that part of the wire that cuts flux.
Now I know a magnetic field can't be cancelled but it can be redirected which acts as shielding a certain area from flux.
The flux is 50hz AC magnetic flux,(essentially a transformer core) and I take the flux to be around 1 Tesla for simplicity although it might be somewhat less than that.
Now I have bought a permalloy metal foil of 0.1mm thickness and my idea is to create a tube of that foil where multiple layers are wrapped around it + add some copper foil tape on the outside. But ideally I would like to calculate the thickness of foil I actually need to drop the flux within the shielded area to a minimal value.
The foil is ASTM A753 Alloy 3 type of permalloy from what I could gather.
I read that for high frequency flux this is easy as even just micrometers of thickness for high permeability metals suffice to shield a high frequency AC flux, but for lower frequency this thickness increases and for DC it becomes large.
I asked this to chatGPT but it gave me somewhat differing answers from time to time so I just want to double check.
Can anybody help me out ?
Now I know a magnetic field can't be cancelled but it can be redirected which acts as shielding a certain area from flux.
The flux is 50hz AC magnetic flux,(essentially a transformer core) and I take the flux to be around 1 Tesla for simplicity although it might be somewhat less than that.
Now I have bought a permalloy metal foil of 0.1mm thickness and my idea is to create a tube of that foil where multiple layers are wrapped around it + add some copper foil tape on the outside. But ideally I would like to calculate the thickness of foil I actually need to drop the flux within the shielded area to a minimal value.
The foil is ASTM A753 Alloy 3 type of permalloy from what I could gather.
I read that for high frequency flux this is easy as even just micrometers of thickness for high permeability metals suffice to shield a high frequency AC flux, but for lower frequency this thickness increases and for DC it becomes large.
I asked this to chatGPT but it gave me somewhat differing answers from time to time so I just want to double check.
Can anybody help me out ?