A new technique for reducing extremely low frequency magnetic field emissions affecting large building structures
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2007
When large structures such as residential
compounds or public buildings are under the influence of
extremely low frequency (ELF) magnetic fields, such as
the one generated by a system of railways fed by
16.67 Hz, standard methods of designing shielding
structures by numerical methods usually fail. The latter
can be explained by the difficulty posed in the computing
process by the large aspect ratios involved due to thin
layers of metal (a few millimetres or centimetres) in
contrast to the large dimensions of the affected structure
(several tens of meters). In some cases one has to utilize
special approximations such as surface conductivity,
which are not easy to handle when the designed shielding
structure is clearly three -dimensional. Other alternatives
such as experimentation in situ are very costly. Here, a
new technique is presented of mitigating the field by
using three-dimensional propagation of induced currents
optimizing the field reduction factors and minimizing the
cost of shielding material. The particular designing
method is a hybrid of numerical simulations combined
with lab experimentation using scaled models of the largestructure. The method is rather cost-effective and flexible as various designs can be easily tested. Results are presented in the form of magnetic field values, at various locations in the buildings, before and after this mitigation technique is applied.
building
Magnetic field
mitigation