Publications

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Design and Evaluation of Nano-Composite Core Inductors for Efficiency Improvement in High- Frequency Power Converters

Conference Proceedings - IEEE Applied Power Electronics Conference and Exposition - APEC

Langlois, Eric L.; Watt, John; Huber, Dale L.; McDonough, Matthew; Monson, Todd M.; Neely, Jason

This paper evaluates the performance of a novel nano-composite core inductor. In this digest, a brief explanation of the superparamagnetic magnetite nanoparticle core is given along with magnetic characterization results and simulated design parameters and dimensions. A nearly flat relative permeability (μr) of around 5 is measured for the magnetic material to 1 MHz. A synchronous buck converter with nano-composite inductor was constructed and evaluated; the converter demonstrates a 1% improvement in conversion efficiency at higher currents (4% reduction in electrical losses), compared to an identical circuit with a benchmark commercial ferrite inductor.

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Magnetoelastic Effects in Doubly Clamped Electroplated Co77Fe23 Microbeam Resonators

Physical Review Applied

Staruch, M.; Bennett, S.P.; Matis, B.R.; Baldwin, J.W.; Bussmann, K.; Gopman, D.B.; Kabanov, Y.; Lau, J.W.; Shull, R.D.; Langlois, Eric L.; Arrington, C.; Pillars, Jamin R.; Finkel, P.

Magnetostrictive Co77Fe23 films are fully suspended to produce free-standing, clamped-clamped, microbeam resonators. A negative or positive shift in the resonant frequency is observed for magnetic fields applied parallel or perpendicular to the length of the beam, respectively, confirming the magnetoelastic nature of the shift. Notably, the resonance shifts linearly with higher-bias fields oriented perpendicular to the beam's length. Domain imaging elucidates the distinction in the reversal processes along the easy and hard axes. Together, these results suggest that through modification of the magnetic anisotropy, the frequency shift and angular dependence can be tuned, producing highly magnetic-field-sensitive resonators.

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Soft Magnetic Multilayered FeSiCrB-Fe x N Metallic Glass Composites Fabricated by Spark Plasma Sintering

IEEE Magnetics Letters

Monson, Todd M.; Zheng, Baolong; Delany, Robert E.; Pearce, Charles J.; Langlois, Eric L.; Lepkowski, Stefan M.; Stevens, Tyler E.; Zhou, Yizhang; Atcitty, Stanley; Lavernia, Enrique J.

Novel multilayered FeSiCrB-Fe x N (x = 2-4) metallic glass composites were fabricated using spark plasma sintering of FeSiCrB amorphous ribbons (Metglas 2605SA3 alloy) and Fe x N (x = 2-4) powder. Crystalline Fe x N can serve as a high magnetic moment, high electrical resistance binder, and lamination material in the consolidation of amorphous and nanocrystalline ribbons, mitigating eddy currents while boosting magnetic performance and stacking factor in both wound and stacked soft magnetic cores. Stacking factors of nearly 100% can be achieved in an amorphous ribbon/iron nitride composite. FeSiCrB-Fe x N multilayered metallic glass composites prepared by spark plasma sintering have the potential to serve as a next-generation soft magnetic material in power electronics and electrical machines.

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Finite element modeling of nanoscale-enabled microinductors for power electronics

Journal of Materials Research

Langlois, Eric L.; Monson, Todd M.; Huber, Dale L.; Watt, John D.

This article focuses on the finite element modeling of toroidal microinductors, employing first-of-its-kind nanocomposite magnetic core material and superparamagnetic iron nanoparticles covalently cross-linked in an epoxy network. Energy loss mechanisms in existing inductor core materials are covered as well as discussions on how this novel core material eliminates them providing a path toward realizing these low form factor devices. Designs for both a 2 μH output and a 500 nH input microinductor are created via the model for a high-performance buck converter. Both modeled inductors have 50 wire turns, less than 1 cm3 form factors, less than 1 Ω AC resistance, and quality factors, Q's, of 27 at 1 MHz. In addition, the output microinductor is calculated to have an average output power of 7 W and a power density of 3.9 kW/in3 by modeling with the 1st generation iron nanocomposite core material.

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Results 1–25 of 42
Results 1–25 of 42