Photographic method to survey magnetic field

In today’s high-tech industries, sophisticated materials testing is one of the precondition for constant output quality at the product level. In industries like automotive, aerospace or tool machine building, magnets with customised magnetic properties and tight tolerances are increasingly used. Examples are magnetic encoders as sensors for angular and path measurement. For these components to function properly and reliably, it is necessary that they exactly maintain their stray magnetic field geometry. For this reason, quick and reliable quality checks of encoder surfaces is in high demand.

Established measurement techniques for encoder are based on Hall sensors and inductive methods. These techniques however hit their limits when it comes to testing the 2D field strength distribution in real time. Typically, it is necessary to apply rasterisation – but this is very time consuming.

Magneto optical techniques, in contrast, can detect 2D inhomogenities of the magnetic fields as well as structure-based gradient fields quickly and directly as an optical representation. The combination with digital camera technology enables to store the field picture in high resolution and process them with appropriate algorithms. Cracks, faulty magnetisation and material defects can be detected immediately. Researchers from Innovent – a non-profit research organisation based in Jena, Germany – now for the first time succeeded in generating a quantifiable image of the magnetic field out of the magneto-optical image. With this method, they can measure local field strengths. The challenge was developing the appropriate sensor layers and achieving a very exact calibration of the magneto-optical system.

The technique can be used to survey encoders, but this is not the only application; it can be used for quality control of magnetic components in general. It can be applied to characterise multipole magnetic materials, ferromagnetic steel alloys and domain materials such as iron sheets and magnetic shape memory alloys. Thus, manufacturers, distributors and users of magnetic materials have a new measurement technique at their disposal that enables them to quickly check field strength distribution of magnetic and magnetisable functional materials at high repeatability.

The sensor technology developed by the Innovent researchers can measure areas of magnetic stray fields of 0.1mT to 150mT on areas of up to 20mm x 15mm. The next step will be tripling the measurement surface to 60mm x 45mm. The optical resolution of the system is 10 over a geometry of several square centimetres.

Source:  http://www.electronics-eetimes.com/en/photographic-method-to-survey-magnetic-field.html?cmp_id=7&news_id=222921841&vID=209&page=1

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