Introduction / examples
Definition
A system is said to be nonlinear when one of the properties of the system is a function of the variable that is an unknown of the system. Two examples are presented in the following paragraph.
Example 1 (thermal application)
The differential equation solved using finite element method in a Steady State Thermal application is the following:
where:
- [k] is the tensor of thermal conductivity
- q is the volume density of power of the heat source
- T is the temperature, respectively the state variable, i.e. the unknown of the system.
If the thermal conductivity k is a function of the temperature T, the system is a nonlinear system.
Example 2 (magnetic application)
The differential equation solved using the finite element method in a Magneto Static application (with the scalar model) can be written:
where:
- [μ] is the tensor of magnetic permeability in the computation domain
- ϕ is a magnetic scalar potential, respectively the state variable
- is a term corresponding to sources (imposed field source or electric vector potential).
If the magnetic permeability μ is a function of the magnetic field H, respectively of the state variable ϕ, the system is a nonlinear system.
Example 2 prime (magnetic application)
The differential equation solved using finite element method in a Magneto Static application (with vector model) can be written:
where:
- [ν] is the tensor of magnetic reluctivity of the computation domain
- is the density of current source
- is the vector potential, respectively the state variable, i.e. the unknown of the system
If the magnetic reluctivity ν is a function of the magnetic flux density B, respectively of the state variable A, the system is a nonlinear system.
Different possibilities
A system is called nonlinear in Flux applications when:
- behavior laws of materials (constitutive equations) are nonlinear
-
B(H) nonlinear law:
(magnetic permeability μ function of the magnetic field H)
-
J(E) nonlinear law:
(electric conductivity σ function of the electric field E)
-
D(E) nonlinear law:
(electric permitttivity ε function of the electric field E)
-
- a thermal property depends on temperature…
- thermal conductivity k function of T
- volume heat capacity function of T
- thermal exchange coefficients function of T
... in Flux
- Models for the behavior laws (electromagnetic properties)
B(H) J(E) D(E) Soft materials Hard materials Linear Linear Linear Constant resistivity Linear Linear complex Linear complex
Linear with losses
Nonlinear Saturation:
- analytic
- analytic + knee adjustment
- spline
Rayleigh
Demagnetization:
- analytic
- analytic + knee adjustment
- spline
Superconductor - Models for thermal properties
k(T) ρCp(T) constant constant linear function of T linear function of T exponential function of T exponential function of T sum of a Gaussian function of T and a constant sum of a Gaussian function of T and an exponential function of T
The models presented above are described in chapter Materials: principles.