Shielding effectiveness of a finite conductivity metallic sphere
An example of how FEKO may be used to compute EMC shielding factors.
Problem description
EMC engineers often design a shielding environment for circuitry or people and have to estimate the shielding effectiveness of the structure before producing a prototype. This example shows how FEKO may be used in such cases. A simple example is chosen of a hollow sphere with finite conductivity, illuminated with a plane wave. The sphere is made of silver, with conductivity 6.1x107 S/m, with wall thickness 2.5 nm. The CADFEKO model of the sphere, with illuminating plane wave indicated is shown in Figure 1. The sphere has a radius of 1m.
| Figure 1: CADFEKO model of hollow sphere |
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Simulation results
Shielding is defined for both electric and magnetic shielding effectiveness and for any given field point is the ratio between the unshielded field strength and the shielded field strength. In this example the point for comparison was the centre of the hollow sphere. A simple run was done to measure the electric and magnetic field strength for the the point without the shield in place and a second run was then done with the shield in place. The ratios were drawn from the gathered data and plotted in dB. The results are presented in Figure 2 and compares well to analytical formulations for the same problem. These results clearly point out that internal resonances occur at higher frequencies, resulting in almost no shielding.
| Figure 2: Shielding effectiveness of a silver sphere |
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