AIP Advances (May 2018)

Properties of dynamic magnetic loss of ferrite

  • Hideo Saotome,
  • Keisuke Azuma,
  • Hiroki Kizuka,
  • Takuma Tanaka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5003858
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
pp. 056103 – 056103-5

Abstract

Read online

The B-H loop of ferrite becomes narrower with a decrease in the excitation frequency. However, even at frequencies lower than 1 kHz, the B-H loop exhibits a certain minimum width, which is referred to as the (DC) hysteresis loop, and its area corresponds to the hysteresis loss. The dynamic magnetic loss is obtained by subtracting the hysteresis loss from the B-H loop area measured at a frequency above 1–10 kHz. The temperature characteristics of the hysteresis and dynamic magnetic losses are determined to be experimentally different, which suggests that the mechanism for the generation of dynamic magnetic loss is not exactly the same as that for the hysteresis loss. The dynamic magnetic loss is expressed using the dynamic magnetic loss parameter, which is a function of B and its time derivative, dB/dt. The dynamic magnetic loss parameter is measured under excitation with a rectangular waveform voltage. A ferrite core of TDK PC47 was used and the maximum magnetic flux density Bm, was set to 350 mT. The measured dynamic magnetic loss parameter was experimentally verified to be one of the intrinsic characteristics of ferrite and was also validated for cases of excitation with sinusoidal waveform voltages.