Title :
Magnetic Nanofluid Applications in Electrical Engineering
Author :
Pislaru-Danescu, Lucian ; Morega, Alexandru Mihail ; Telipan, Gabriela ; Morega, Mihaela ; Dumitru, Jean B. ; Marinescu, Virgil
Author_Institution :
Nat. Inst. for Electr. Eng. ICPE-CA, Bucharest, Romania
Abstract :
This paper presents a superparamagnetic nanofluid (SMP-NF) and three of its applications. The SPM-NF particles were suspended in oleic acid as surfactant, and then dispersed in UTR 40 transformer oil (TO). The average particle size obtained from X-ray diffraction is 14 nm, and from scanning electron microscopy is between 10 and 30 nm. The magnetic measurements for the oleic-oil transformer acid-magnetite nanoparticles of 27 nm diameter in size and 9.78×1025 nanoparticles/m3 particle density system provide for specific saturation magnetization, Ms. The volume fraction is 1.1% and the magnetization is 62 Gs. The SPM-NF may be designed to be used either as coolant or as magnetic medium in three electrotechnic devices: a power electric transformer TMOf 2-36 kV-40 kVA, at 50 Hz, a microactuator that implements the pulse width modulation (PWM) principle, and in miniature planar spiral transformers, for galvanic separation or step-up/step-down conversion. The paper presents experimental and numerical simulation results that confirm that the SPM-NF usage open new venues in optimizing conventional electrotechnic constructions or to design novel devices.
Keywords :
X-ray diffraction; iron compounds; magnetic fluids; magnetic particles; magnetisation; microactuators; nanofluidics; nanomagnetics; nanoparticles; numerical analysis; particle size; power transformers; scanning electron microscopy; superparamagnetism; surfactants; transformer oil; Fe3O4; PWM principle; UTR 40 transformer oil; X-ray diffraction; apparent power 40 kVA; coolant; electrical engineering; electrotechnic devices; frequency 50 Hz; galvanic separation; magnetic measurements; magnetic medium; magnetic nanofluid application; microactuator; miniature planar spiral transformers; numerical simulation; oleic acid-oil transformer-magnetite nanoparticles; particle size; power electric transformer TMOf; pulse width modulation principle; saturation magnetization; scanning electron microscopy; step-up-step-down conversion; superparamagnetic nanofluid particles; surfactant; voltage 2 kV to 36 kV; volume fraction; Colloidal magnetic ${rm Fe}_{3}{rm O}_{4}$ nanoparticles; electrical transformer; magnetic nanofluid coolant; magnetic properties; microactuator; miniature planar spiral transformer; numerical simulation; pulse width modulation; scanning electron microscopy;
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMAG.2013.2271607