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  2. Mu-metal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu-metal

    The high permeability of mu-metal provides a low reluctance path for magnetic flux, leading to its use in magnetic shields against static or slowly varying magnetic fields. Magnetic shielding made with high-permeability alloys like mu-metal works not by blocking magnetic fields but by providing a path for the magnetic field lines around the ...

  3. Permeability (electromagnetism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permeability...

    A useful tool for dealing with high frequency magnetic effects is the complex permeability. While at low frequencies in a linear material the magnetic field and the auxiliary magnetic field are simply proportional to each other through some scalar permeability, at high frequencies these quantities will react to each other with some lag time. [36]

  4. Magnetic anisotropy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_anisotropy

    In other words, the easy axis is an energetically favorable direction of spontaneous magnetization. Because the two opposite directions along an easy axis are usually equivalently easy to magnetize along, the actual direction of magnetization can just as easily settle into either direction, which is an example of spontaneous symmetry breaking.

  5. Saturation (magnetic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturation_(magnetic)

    Different materials have different saturation levels. For example, high permeability iron alloys used in transformers reach magnetic saturation at 1.6–2.2 teslas (T), [4] whereas ferrites saturate at 0.2–0.5 T. [5] Some amorphous alloys saturate at 1.2–1.3 T. [6] Mu-metal saturates at around 0.8 T. [7] [8]

  6. Sendust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sendust

    Sendust composition is typically 85% iron, 9% silicon and 6% aluminium. The powder is sintered into cores to manufacture inductors. Sendust cores have high magnetic permeability (up to 140 000) [ clarification needed ] , low loss, low coercivity (5 A/m) good temperature stability and saturation flux density up to 1 T [ clarification needed ] .

  7. Polder tensor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polder_tensor

    The Polder tensor is a tensor introduced by Dirk Polder [1] for the description of magnetic permeability of ferrites. [2] The tensor notation needs to be used because ferrimagnetic material becomes anisotropic in the presence of a magnetizing field. The tensor is described mathematically as: [3]

  8. Magnetic core - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_core

    Magnetic field (green) created by a current-carrying winding (red) in a typical magnetic core transformer or inductor, with the iron core C forming a closed loop, possibly with air gaps G in it. The drawing shows a section through the core. The purpose of the core is to provide a closed high permeability path for the magnetic field lines.

  9. Permalloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permalloy

    Strip of permalloy. Permalloy is a nickel–iron magnetic alloy, with about 80% nickel and 20% iron content.Invented in 1914 by physicist Gustav Elmen at Bell Telephone Laboratories, [1] it is notable for its very high magnetic permeability, which makes it useful as a magnetic core material in electrical and electronic equipment, and also in magnetic shielding to block magnetic fields.