论文标题
表征涡流模型与波传播之间的智慧中的小物体
Characterising small objects in the regime between the eddy current model and wave propagation
论文作者
论文摘要
能够以低频表征对象,但要高于麦克斯韦系统的涡流近似的限制频率,对于改善当前金属检测技术很重要。重要的是,涡流模型的上限限制取决于对象拓扑及其材料,与相同尺寸和材料的其他几何相比,某些几何形状的最大频率要小得多。此外,与不可渗透的物体(具有相似的电导率,尺寸和形状相似),涡流模型在较小的频率上分解了较小的频率,因此,并非总是可能使用典型的金属探测器操作的涡流材料制成的可渗透电流制成的小磁对象。为了解决这个问题,我们为可渗透的高导通对象得出了一种新的渐近扩展,该物体适用于小物体,并且适用于涡流极限以上的频率。我们得出的领先顺序术语从极化性张量对象描述方面导致对象特征的新形式,在这些张量对象描述中,可以通过解决矢量传输问题获得系数。我们预计,当考虑与线圈较大距离距离的物体时,这些新特征将很重要,这对于安全关键应用很重要,例如地雷,未爆炸的军械和隐藏武器很重要。我们还期望在表征高深度的考古和法医意义的伪影时,我们的结果至关重要。涡流模型允许并具有进一步的应用停车传感器并改善对隐藏,视野,金属物体的检测的进一步应用。
Being able to characterise objects at low frequencies, but above the limiting frequency of the eddy current approximation of the Maxwell system, is important for improving current metal detection technologies. Importantly, the upper frequency limit of the eddy current model depends on the object topology and on its materials, with the maximum frequency being much smaller for certain geometries compared to others of the same size and materials. Additionally, the eddy current model breaks down at much smaller frequencies for highly magnetic conducting materials compared to non-permeable objects (with similar conductivities, sizes and shapes) and, hence, characterising small magnetic objects made of permeable materials using the eddy current at typical frequencies of operation for a metal detector is not always possible. To address this, we derive a new asymptotic expansion for permeable highly conducting objects that is valid for small objects and holds for frequencies just beyond the eddy current limit. The leading order term we derive leads to new forms of object characterisations in terms of polarizability tensor object descriptions where the coefficients can be obtained from solving vectorial transmission problems. We expect these new characterisations to be important when considering objects at greater stand-off distance from the coils, which is important for safety critical applications, such as the identification of landmines, unexploded ordnance and concealed weapons. We also expect our results to be important when characterising artefacts of archaeological and forensic significance at greater depths than the eddy current model allows and to have further applications parking sensors and improving the detection of hidden, out-of-sight, metallic objects.