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1 – 10 of over 1000Discusses the 27 papers in ISEF 1999 Proceedings on the subject of electromagnetisms. States the groups of papers cover such subjects within the discipline as: induction machines;…
Abstract
Discusses the 27 papers in ISEF 1999 Proceedings on the subject of electromagnetisms. States the groups of papers cover such subjects within the discipline as: induction machines; reluctance motors; PM motors; transformers and reactors; and special problems and applications. Debates all of these in great detail and itemizes each with greater in‐depth discussion of the various technical applications and areas. Concludes that the recommendations made should be adhered to.
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J. Gyselinck, P. Dular, C. Geuzaine and W. Legros
This paper deals with the two‐dimensional finite element analysis in the frequency domain of saturated electromagnetic devices coupled to electrical circuits comprising nonlinear…
Abstract
This paper deals with the two‐dimensional finite element analysis in the frequency domain of saturated electromagnetic devices coupled to electrical circuits comprising nonlinear resistive and inductive components. The resulting system of nonlinear algebraic equations is solved straightforwardly by means of the Newton‐Raphson method. As an application example we consider a three‐phase transformer feeding a nonlinear RL load through a six‐pulse diode rectifier. The harmonic balance results are compared to those obtained with time‐stepping and the computational cost is briefly discussed.
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Mahdi Shayanmehr and Omid Basiri
In this paper, the important aspects of vibration analysis of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as nano-resonators are studied. This study has covered the important nonlinear phenomena such…
Abstract
Purpose
In this paper, the important aspects of vibration analysis of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as nano-resonators are studied. This study has covered the important nonlinear phenomena such as jump super-harmonic and chaotic behavior. CNT is modeled by using the modified nonlocal theory (MNT).
Design/methodology/approach
In previous research studies, the effects of CNT’s rotary inertia, stiffness and shear modulus of the medium were neglected. So by considering these terms in MNT, a comprehensive model of vibrational behavior of carbon nanotube as a nanosensor is presented. The nanotube is modeled as a nonlocal nonlinear beam. The first eigenmode of an undamped simply supported beam is used to extract the nonlinear equation of CNT. Harmonic balance method is used to solve the equation, while to study its super-harmonic behavior, higher-order harmonic terms were used.
Findings
In light of frequency response equation, jump phenomenon and chaotic behavior of the nanotube with respect to the amplitude of excitation are investigated. Also in each section of the study, the effects of elastic medium and nonlocal parameters on the vibration behavior of nanotube are investigated. Furthermore, parts of the results in linear and nonlinear cases were compared with results of other references.
Originality/value
The present modification of the nonlocal theory is so important and useful for accurate investigation of the vibrational behavior of nano structures such as a nano-resonator.
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Md. Helal Uddin Molla, Md. Abdur Razzak and M.S. Alam
The purpose of this paper is to present an analytical technique, based on the He’s energy balance method (an improved version recently presented by Khan et al.), to obtain the…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to present an analytical technique, based on the He’s energy balance method (an improved version recently presented by Khan et al.), to obtain the approximate solution of quadratic nonlinear oscillator (QNO).
Design/methodology/approach
This oscillator (QNO) is used as a mathematical model of the human eardrum oscillation.
Findings
It has been shown that the results by the present technique are very close to the numerical solution.
Originality/value
The results obtained in this paper are compared with those obtained by Hu (harmonic balance method) and Khan et al. The result shows that the method is more accurate and effective than harmonic balance as well as improved energy balance methods.
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Gergely Koczka and Oszkár Bíró
The purpose of the paper is to show the application of the fixed‐point method with the T, Φ‐Φ formulation to get the steady‐state solution of the quasi‐static Maxwell's equations…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of the paper is to show the application of the fixed‐point method with the T, Φ‐Φ formulation to get the steady‐state solution of the quasi‐static Maxwell's equations with non‐linear material properties and periodic excitations.
Design/methodology/approach
The fixed‐point method is used to solve the problem arising from the non‐linear material properties. The harmonic balance principle and a time periodic technique give the periodic solution in all non‐linear iterations. The optimal parameter of the fixed‐point method is investigated to accelerate its convergence speed.
Findings
The Galerkin equations of the DC part are found to be different from those of the higher harmonics. The optimal parameter of the fixed‐point method is determined.
Originality/value
The establishment of the Galerkin equations of the DC part is a new result. The method is first used to solve three‐dimensional problems with the T, Φ‐Φ formulation.
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Nianqi Deng, Xinyu Jiang and Xiaojun Fan
Limited research has explored why and how cause-related marketing on social media influences consumers' responses. Drawing upon balance theory and consistency theory, this study…
Abstract
Purpose
Limited research has explored why and how cause-related marketing on social media influences consumers' responses. Drawing upon balance theory and consistency theory, this study aims to identify the mechanism of cause-related marketing on social media.
Design/methodology/approach
Data were collected from a sample of 360 users of cause-related marketing campaigns on social media and analyzed using structural equation modeling in Mplus 8.0.
Findings
The three types of congruence – self-image congruence, brand-image congruence and value congruence – can serve as sub-dimensions of perceived fit between a consumer, brand and cause of a cause-related marketing campaign on social media. Importantly, these perceived fit sub-dimensions positively influence community identification and, therefore, influence consumer citizenship behaviors.
Practical implications
The findings provide theoretical and practical contributions for a brand to undertake cause-related marketing on social media.
Originality/value
This study clarifies the myth of the perceived fit of cause-related marketing on social media and examines the perceived fit sub-dimensions’ mechanism of consumers' responses through community identification.
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Markus Wick, Matthias Jüttner and Wolfgang M. Rucker
The high calculation effort for accurate material loss simulation prevents its observation in most magnetic devices. This paper aims at reducing this effort for time periodic…
Abstract
Purpose
The high calculation effort for accurate material loss simulation prevents its observation in most magnetic devices. This paper aims at reducing this effort for time periodic applications and so for the steady state of such devices.
Design/methodology/approach
The vectorized Jiles-Atherton hysteresis model is chosen for the accurate material losses calculation. It is transformed in the frequency domain and coupled with a harmonic balanced finite element solver. The beneficial Jacobian matrix of the material model in the frequency domain is assembled based on Fourier transforms of the Jacobian matrix in the time domain. A three-phase transformer is simulated to verify this method and to examine the multi-harmonic coupling.
Findings
A fast method to calculate the linearization of non-trivial material models in the frequency domain is shown. The inter-harmonic coupling is moderate, and so, a separated harmonic balanced solver is favored. The additional calculation effort compared to a saturation material model without losses is low. The overall calculation time is much lower than a time-dependent simulation.
Research limitations/implications
A moderate working point is chosen, so highly saturated materials may lead to a worse coupling. A single material model is evaluated. Researchers are encouraged to evaluate the suggested method on different material models. Frequency domain approaches should be in favor for all kinds of periodic steady-state applications.
Practical implications
Because of the reduced calculation effort, the simulation of accurate material losses becomes reasonable. This leads to a more accurate development of magnetic devices.
Originality/value
This paper proposes a new efficient method to calculate complex material models like the Jiles-Atherton hysteresis and their Jacobian matrices in the frequency domain.
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Herbert De Gersem, Hans Vande Sande and Kay Hameyer
The harmonic balanced finite element method offers a valuable alternative to the transient finite element method for the quasi‐static simulation of electromagnetic devices…
Abstract
The harmonic balanced finite element method offers a valuable alternative to the transient finite element method for the quasi‐static simulation of electromagnetic devices operating at steady‐state. The specially designed iterative solver, the adaptive relaxation of the non‐linear loop and the embedding of the harmonic balanced finite element method within a state‐of‐the‐art finite element package, leads to a solver in the frequency domain that is competitive to time stepping. The benefits of this approach are illustrated by its application to an inductor with a ferromagnetic core.
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Vasundhara Mahajan, Pramod Agarwal and Hari Om Gupta
The active power filter with two-level inverter needs a high-rating coupling transformer for high-power applications. This complicates the control and system becomes bulky and…
Abstract
Purpose
The active power filter with two-level inverter needs a high-rating coupling transformer for high-power applications. This complicates the control and system becomes bulky and expensive. The purpose of this paper is to motivate the use of multilevel inverter as harmonic filter, which eliminates the coupling transformer and allows direct control of the power circuit. The advancement in artificial intelligence (AI) for computation is explored for controller design.
Design/methodology/approach
The proposed scheme has a five-level cascaded H-bridge multilevel inverter (CHBMLI) as a harmonic filter. The control scheme includes one neural network controller and two fuzzy logic-based controllers for harmonic extraction, dc capacitor voltage balancing, and compensating current adjustment, respectively. The topology is modeled in MATLAB/SIMULINK and implemented using dSPACE DS1103 interface for experimentation.
Findings
The exhaustive simulation and experimental results demonstrate the robustness and effectiveness of the proposed topology and controllers for harmonic minimization for RL/RC load and change in load. The comparison between traditional PI controller and proposed AI-based controller is presented. It indicates that the AI-based controller is fast, dynamic, and adaptive to accommodate the changes in load. The total harmonic distortion obtained by applying AI-based controllers are well within the IEEE519 std. limits.
Originality/value
The simulation of high-power, medium-voltage system is presented and a downscaled prototype is designed and developed for implementation. The laboratory module of CHBMLI-based harmonic filter and AI-based controllers modeled in SIMULINK is executed using dSPACE DS1103 interface through real time workshop.
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Xiaojun Zhao, Lin Li, Junwei Lu, Zhiguang Cheng and Tiebing Lu
This paper aims to introduce the decomposed harmonic balance finite element method (HBFEM) to decrease the memory requirement in large‐scale computation of the DC‐biasing magnetic…
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to introduce the decomposed harmonic balance finite element method (HBFEM) to decrease the memory requirement in large‐scale computation of the DC‐biasing magnetic field. Harmonic analysis of the flux density and flux distribution was carried out to investigate the DC biased problem in a laminated core model (LCM).
Design/methodology/approach
Based on the DC bias test on a LCM, the decomposed HBFEM is applied to accurately calculate the DC‐biasing magnetic field. External electric circuits are coupled with the magnetic field in the harmonic domain. The reluctivity matrix is decomposed and the block Gauss‐Seidel algorithm solves each harmonic solution of magnetic field and exciting current sequentially.
Findings
The calculated exciting currents and flux density are compared with that obtained from measurement and time domain finite element analysis, respectively, which demonstrates consistency. The DC bias leads to the significant saturation of the magnetic core and serious distortion of the exciting current. The flux density varies nonlinearly with DC bias excitation.
Research limitations/implications
The harmonic balance method is only applicable in solving the steady state magnetic field. Future improvements in the method are necessary in order to manage the hysteresis effects in magnetic material.
Originality/value
The proposed method to solve the DC biased problem significantly reduces the memory requirement compared to the conventional HBFEM. The decomposed harmonic balance equations are solved efficiently by the block Gauss‐Seidel algorithm combined with the relaxation iterative scheme. An investigation on DC bias phenomena is carried out through the harmonic solution of the magnetic field. The decomposed HBFEM can also be applied to solve 3‐D DC‐biasing magnetic field and eddy current nonlinear problems in a practical power transformer.
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