Electrostatic shielding of the coils
In the old times, with low sensitivity detectors, a quick and easy "hand test", was good enough for verifying the shielding of the coils.
As the detectors become more and more sensitive, they become capable of sensing much weaker conductors like the conductivity of the human body or the blood it contains.
Sometimes we intend to reduce this sensitivity, "dumb down" the detector. But, most of the time we want to keep all the sensitivity we can get.
So, what do we want to shield against? Electrostatic. Electrostatic is of capacitive nature.
Probably there are quite a few different ways to implement the shielding and many valid, different ways to implement a test to verify the effectiveness of the shielding.
Let's hear about it.
Ah, yes, we need to separate the coil shielding into 2 categories: VLF and PI, because different rules apply.
For myself, I have been using the following method for PI coils:
Apply a spacer over the coil, so that the shielding does not add too much capacitance to the coil and thus change the SRF self resonant frequency of the coil.
Trial and error has shown that about 1/8 of an inch or 3mm spacer works OK, more is better.
Over the spacer I apply a coat of graphite paint. Now here it gets tricky. How conductive should this paint be? It appears that we can compensate for lesser conductivity by applying a thicker coat.
Gap or no gap?
PI detectors transmit a very powerful magnetic field pulse that induces eddy currents in any and every conductor within it's reach. If the shielding makes a loop, the eddy currents will race around in this loop until all the energy has been dissipated.
A big eddy current loop generates a big magnetic field around it. This is not what we want from the shield.
What we want from the shield, is for the eddy currents to form many very small loops, very small magnetic fields that run in every direction, so that they null each other by coupling.
Therefor we want to leave a gap in the loop of shielding that we apply on the coil loop.
Testing the shielding effectiveness. We will talk about that next time.
In the old times, with low sensitivity detectors, a quick and easy "hand test", was good enough for verifying the shielding of the coils.
As the detectors become more and more sensitive, they become capable of sensing much weaker conductors like the conductivity of the human body or the blood it contains.
Sometimes we intend to reduce this sensitivity, "dumb down" the detector. But, most of the time we want to keep all the sensitivity we can get.
So, what do we want to shield against? Electrostatic. Electrostatic is of capacitive nature.
Probably there are quite a few different ways to implement the shielding and many valid, different ways to implement a test to verify the effectiveness of the shielding.
Let's hear about it.
Ah, yes, we need to separate the coil shielding into 2 categories: VLF and PI, because different rules apply.
For myself, I have been using the following method for PI coils:
Apply a spacer over the coil, so that the shielding does not add too much capacitance to the coil and thus change the SRF self resonant frequency of the coil.
Trial and error has shown that about 1/8 of an inch or 3mm spacer works OK, more is better.
Over the spacer I apply a coat of graphite paint. Now here it gets tricky. How conductive should this paint be? It appears that we can compensate for lesser conductivity by applying a thicker coat.
Gap or no gap?
PI detectors transmit a very powerful magnetic field pulse that induces eddy currents in any and every conductor within it's reach. If the shielding makes a loop, the eddy currents will race around in this loop until all the energy has been dissipated.
A big eddy current loop generates a big magnetic field around it. This is not what we want from the shield.
What we want from the shield, is for the eddy currents to form many very small loops, very small magnetic fields that run in every direction, so that they null each other by coupling.
Therefor we want to leave a gap in the loop of shielding that we apply on the coil loop.
Testing the shielding effectiveness. We will talk about that next time.
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