Sujet : Re: squeezing a field
De : pcdhSpamMeSenseless (at) *nospam* electrooptical.net (Phil Hobbs)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 23. Oct 2024, 19:14:57
Autres entêtes
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john larkin <
jl@glen--canyon.com> wrote:
I'm designing a small PCB with essentially 5 sync buck switching
regulators. Board space is tight so I want to put the inductors on the
bottom of the multilayer board. There's a 0.2" gap between the bottom
of the board and a big aluminum flange.
Unshielded drum cores have the most energy storage per volume or
dollars. They store energy in the universe instead of in ferrite. Good
cooling too.
Something like this just fits
https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/bourns-inc/SRN8040TA-470M/6155133
Its mag field lines will bounce off the PCB planes and the flange,
change from the classic bar magnet pattern into a pancake . I wonder
what that will do to its electrical behavior.
Not a whole lot. In the near-field region, B obeys Laplace’s equation,
which means among other things that the field falls off on the length scale
of the gap, not of the whole inductor.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
-- Dr Philip C D Hobbs Principal Consultant ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics Optics,Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics