Low cost demonstration experiment Lorentz force: Change in path of charged particles in magnetic field

Resonance ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 849-855
Author(s):  
Amit Ram Morarka ◽  
Chaitanya Dixit
2008 ◽  
Vol 375-376 ◽  
pp. 6-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Min Shi ◽  
Yu Quan Chen ◽  
Er Liang Liu

With widely using difficult-to-process materials, such as the stainless steel and SnSb alloy, the magnetic-electrochemical compound polishing process has been paid much more attention by some Japanese and Chinese researchers. In the paper, the math model of the movement of the charged particles in a magnetic field is established through the analysis of its movement process, using Coulomb laws and Lorentz force. The velocity equations and loci equations are concluded, and the movements of there typical particles are compared carefully and analyzed. Therefore, the function of the magnetic field is drawn. In the end, to verify the model, the magnetic- electrochemical compound polishing process were tested and the results were compared with those obtained from the model, the results showed the movement model was reasonable and the analyzing to function of magnetic field was correct.


2009 ◽  
Vol 416 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Min Shi ◽  
Yong Jiang Niu ◽  
Er Liang Liu ◽  
Yong Feng Ma

Magnetic-electrochemical compound polishing is applied in difficult-to-process materials little by little. The influence of the magnetic field to electrochemical process is very complicated. In the paper, using Coulomb laws and Lorentz force, the two kinds of math model of the movement of the charged particles are established according to the different magnetic field whose direction is vertical or parallel to the electrical field. The velocity equations and loci equations of three typical particles are concluded in two kinds of magnetic field’s directions. To be compared and analyzed carefully, the influence of the magnetic field’s direction to polishing is concluded. This study can guide how to determine the magnetic field’s direction in magnetic-electrochemical compound polishing, and build the theoretical basis to study the mechanism of magnetic-electrochemical compound polishing.


Author(s):  
Alexander Vakhrushev ◽  
Abdellah Kharicha ◽  
Ebrahim Karimi-Sibaki ◽  
Menghuai Wu ◽  
Andreas Ludwig ◽  
...  

AbstractA numerical study is presented that deals with the flow in the mold of a continuous slab caster under the influence of a DC magnetic field (electromagnetic brakes (EMBrs)). The arrangement and geometry investigated here is based on a series of previous experimental studies carried out at the mini-LIMMCAST facility at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR). The magnetic field models a ruler-type EMBr and is installed in the region of the ports of the submerged entry nozzle (SEN). The current article considers magnet field strengths up to 441 mT, corresponding to a Hartmann number of about 600, and takes the electrical conductivity of the solidified shell into account. The numerical model of the turbulent flow under the applied magnetic field is implemented using the open-source CFD package OpenFOAM®. Our numerical results reveal that a growing magnitude of the applied magnetic field may cause a reversal of the flow direction at the meniscus surface, which is related the formation of a “multiroll” flow pattern in the mold. This phenomenon can be explained as a classical magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) effect: (1) the closure of the induced electric current results not primarily in a braking Lorentz force inside the jet but in an acceleration in regions of previously weak velocities, which initiates the formation of an opposite vortex (OV) close to the mean jet; (2) this vortex develops in size at the expense of the main vortex until it reaches the meniscus surface, where it becomes clearly visible. We also show that an acceleration of the meniscus flow must be expected when the applied magnetic field is smaller than a critical value. This acceleration is due to the transfer of kinetic energy from smaller turbulent structures into the mean flow. A further increase in the EMBr intensity leads to the expected damping of the mean flow and, consequently, to a reduction in the size of the upper roll. These investigations show that the Lorentz force cannot be reduced to a simple damping effect; depending on the field strength, its action is found to be topologically complex.


1958 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 446-447
Author(s):  
Willard H. Bennett

A tube has been developed in which the shapes of streams of charged particles moving in the earth's magnetic field can be produced accurately to scale. The tube has been named the Störmertron in honor of Carl Störmer who calculated many such orbits. New developments which have made this tube possible include a method for coating the inside of large glass tubes with a transparent electrically conducting film, and an electron gun producing gas-focused streams in less than ½ micron of mercury vapor, a nearly vapor-free grease joint, and a nearly vapor-free carbon black. The magnetic dipole field of the earth is simulated with an Alnico magnet capped with properly shaped soft iron caps. The stream is deflected using two pairs of yoke coils near the gun.


2016 ◽  
Vol 791 ◽  
pp. 568-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew D. Gilbert ◽  
Joanne Mason ◽  
Steven M. Tobias

In the process of flux expulsion, a magnetic field is expelled from a region of closed streamlines on a $TR_{m}^{1/3}$ time scale, for magnetic Reynolds number $R_{m}\gg 1$ ($T$ being the turnover time of the flow). This classic result applies in the kinematic regime where the flow field is specified independently of the magnetic field. A weak magnetic ‘core’ is left at the centre of a closed region of streamlines, and this decays exponentially on the $TR_{m}^{1/2}$ time scale. The present paper extends these results to the dynamical regime, where there is competition between the process of flux expulsion and the Lorentz force, which suppresses the differential rotation. This competition is studied using a quasi-linear model in which the flow is constrained to be axisymmetric. The magnetic Prandtl number $R_{m}/R_{e}$ is taken to be small, with $R_{m}$ large, and a range of initial field strengths $b_{0}$ is considered. Two scaling laws are proposed and confirmed numerically. For initial magnetic fields below the threshold $b_{core}=O(UR_{m}^{-1/3})$, flux expulsion operates despite the Lorentz force, cutting through field lines to result in the formation of a central core of magnetic field. Here $U$ is a velocity scale of the flow and magnetic fields are measured in Alfvén units. For larger initial fields the Lorentz force is dominant and the flow creates Alfvén waves that propagate away. The second threshold is $b_{dynam}=O(UR_{m}^{-3/4})$, below which the field follows the kinematic evolution and decays rapidly. Between these two thresholds the magnetic field is strong enough to suppress differential rotation, leaving a magnetically controlled core spinning in solid body motion, which then decays slowly on a time scale of order $TR_{m}$.


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