2014
DOI: 10.1109/tie.2013.2281168
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Empirical Verification of a Short-Coil Correction Factor

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Cited by 16 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…The authors in Ref. [7] introduce a frequency dependent (or temperature dependent) Nagaoka correction factor and verify its accuracy experimentally for different frequency ranges and sample materials. In this work we assume that the correction factor is a nonlinear function of temperature, which we determine numerically by calibrating the model with the experiments.…”
Section: Mathematical Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The authors in Ref. [7] introduce a frequency dependent (or temperature dependent) Nagaoka correction factor and verify its accuracy experimentally for different frequency ranges and sample materials. In this work we assume that the correction factor is a nonlinear function of temperature, which we determine numerically by calibrating the model with the experiments.…”
Section: Mathematical Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The modified Nagaoka coefficient we consider in the model is Kn=αTKn where αT is a temperature dependent parameter, which is found by calibrating the model with the experiments. This approach is more general and practical than the approach presented in Ref [7]. αT includes many other relevant influencing factors like geometry corrections (imperfections, complex shapes), material uncertainties, and boundary conditions.…”
Section: Mathematical Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…X g is the air gap reactance. These parameters are estimated by using following formulations [9,10] graphite crucible, respectively, A c is the effective area (m 2 )o f induction coil, k n and k * n are the short coil and modified kNagaoka correction factors ((4) suggested by Vaughan and Williamson,(5) suggested by Kennedy), respectively, k r is the coil inter-turn space factor.…”
Section: Analytical Formulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The analytical derivation of the time-averaged Lorentz forces for helical coils is presented in the Appendix, and the key equations have also been published and discussed elsewhere [16,17]. The required correction factors for "Short" coils [18] are currently available only as an average along the entire length of the coil, making it impossible to accurately estimate the forces as a function of axial position. However, the analytical solution is still a highly useful tool to evaluate the overall accuracy of any numerical Lorentz force modelling [16], and if combined with drag coefficients or Stokes' law it can be used to determine magnitudes for particle migration velocities, at least in the absence of MHD effects.…”
Section: Electromagnetophoresis Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%