Describing material media
Introduction
The material media are modeled by material regions:
- mainly volume regions in 3D problems; surface regions and line regions are also possible in 3D
- mainly surface regions in 2D problems; line regions and point regions are also possible in 2D
For additional information about the role of regions, see chapter Physics: principles.
Material regions: overview
Volume, surface or line material regions allow the modeling of the material media (with materials). The physical properties of the medium are those of the corresponding material region.
A region… | enables the modeling… | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Specific Magneto Static | air or vacuum | of the air or vacuum (permeability μr =1) |
(soft material only) |
|
magnetic non conducting |
of a region: magnetic (permeability μr) non-conducting |
|||
coil conductor1 |
of a region: conducting with source1 non-magnetic (permeability μr =1) → this region represents a coil
|
A region… | enables the modeling… | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Specific Transient / Steady state AC Magnetic |
solid conductor |
of a region: magnetic (permeability μr) conducting (resistivity ρ ) |
(can be: passive/active) |
A region… | enables the modeling… | ||
---|---|---|---|
Specific Steady state AC Magnetic 2D and 3D |
coil conductor with losses |
of a region: conducting with source1 non-magnetic (permeability μr =1) |
A region… | enables the modeling… | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Specific Steady state AC Magnetic 3D |
solid conductor described as surface region in surface impedance formulation2 |
of a region: magnetic (permeability μr) conducting (resistivity ρ ) characterized by: a very small skin depth with respect to the dimensions of the region |
(passive) |
Thin regions
The thin region item (condition) enables modeling volume regions of small thickness using surface regions.
- The following region types are available for a 2D application:
- Air-gap (= Air or vacuum ) region
- Coil conductor region
- Solid conductor region (passive or active)*
- The following region types are available for a 3D application:
- Air-gap (= Air or vacuum ) region
- Magnetic region
-
Thin conducting region (= Passive solid conductor)
(with hyperbolic variation of current density on the region thickness)*
Filiform regions
The filiform region item enables the modeling of small cross-section regions.
- The following region type is available for a 2D application:
- Coil conductor region
- The following region type is available for a 3D application:
- Magnetic region
Coil conductor region with losses and detailed geometrical description
The losses in the stranded type conductors due to skin effect and to the proximity effect can be difficult to model because of the big number of elementary wires composing the conductors. To obtain an accurate calculation of these losses in high frequency applications, it is preferable to have at least two meshes within the skin depth thickness of the elementary wires. Then, the number of nodes of finite element meshing should be very high, incompatible with the currently available computation resources, especially in 3D.
In order to be able to quantify these losses in an accurate manner with a reasonable computation time and memory resources, a homogenization technique has been implemented in the Flux software through the Coil Conductor region with losses and detailed geometrical description