Transient Magnetic face (3D) / line (2D) region
Introduction
The face (in 3D) / line (in 2D) regions are:
-
either material regions: used to model thin regions in the study domain
-
or non-material regions: used to impose boundary conditions (BC) inside or on the frontiers of the study domain
Material regions (thin regions)
Thin regions enable the modeling of regions of slight thickness (cracks, air-gap, current sheets, etc.).
The thin regions are described in the same way as the massive regions; with in addition the thickness of the region
The following thin region types are available for a 2D and 3D applications:
- Air-gap (= Air or vacuum) / in 2D and 3D
- Magnetic * / in 3D
- Coil conductor / in 2D
- Solid conductor (passive or active) / in 2D
Thin region | Direction of fields H and B | ||
---|---|---|---|
no restriction | quasi normal | quasi tangential | |
magnetic |
soft material with: μ2 μ1 |
soft material with: μ2 << μ1 |
soft material with: μ2 >> μ1 |
Non-material regions
Non-material regions enable to impose the boundaries conditions (BC).
A region … | is a BC that enables one to impose … | It is defined by … |
---|---|---|
Normal magnetic field |
a normal magnetic field a tangential electric field |
(predefined) |
Tangential magnetic field |
a tangential magnetic field a normal electric field |
(predefined) |
… on the faces/lines that form the region |