Measured surface magnetic field attenuation of shielded windows and wire mesh over an electrically small enclosure
Abstract
The surface magnetic field attenuation of five types of shielded transparency (window) material was measured over the frequency range 10 kHz to 100 MHz by installing them on a .61 m x .61 m x .2 m enclosure, placing the enclosure on the wall of a TEM cell and measuring the surface and interior magnetic fields using a computer-controlled network analyzer system. The samples included two thicknesses of conductive grids on acrylic, hardware cloth with 1/8 and 1/4-inch mesh, and a fine mesh laminated optical display window. These measurements are indicative of an enclosure with aperture coupling; namely, they become frequency-independent at high frequencies. Coarse mesh samples (1/8-1/4-inch mesh) were able to provide 50 to 60 dB of magnetic field reduction at tens of MHz, whereas the finer mesh did slightly better. This behavior is consistent with magnetic polarizability theory. Material thickness did not have an appreciable effect for frequencies above a MHz.
- Publication:
-
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science
- Pub Date:
- December 1984
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1984ITNS...31.1312H
- Keywords:
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- Electric Wire;
- Electromagnetic Surface Waves;
- Magnetic Shielding;
- Windows (Apertures);
- Aircraft Construction Materials;
- Magnetic Field Configurations;
- Mesh;
- Transverse Waves;
- Wave Attenuation;
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering