Hello everyone.
I am a newbie in metal detector world and this is my first post here. I have been observing and learning from posts here to understand metal detector theories. I also started reading "Inside the Metal Detector" to understand basic principles and circuits in systematic way.
I plan to apply metal detector principle in different field than treasure hunting. I am a civil engineer and we use steel fibers or iron compounds (like Fe3O4 powder) in some concrete to achieve certain properties: such as tighter cracks and more load bearing. I want to detect whether the concrete has steel fiber or iron powder incorporated.
After reading some theories and experimenting with some cheap hobbyist pulse induction (PI) metal detector, I found the metal detectors either reject the ferrous metals, that I am interested in detecting, or the range is not so good. In some cases, such as iron powder sample, it does not detect the material at all even though the sample is very magnetic when tested with a permanent magnet.
Questions I have:
Any help or suggestions would be highly appreciated.
I am a newbie in metal detector world and this is my first post here. I have been observing and learning from posts here to understand metal detector theories. I also started reading "Inside the Metal Detector" to understand basic principles and circuits in systematic way.
I plan to apply metal detector principle in different field than treasure hunting. I am a civil engineer and we use steel fibers or iron compounds (like Fe3O4 powder) in some concrete to achieve certain properties: such as tighter cracks and more load bearing. I want to detect whether the concrete has steel fiber or iron powder incorporated.
After reading some theories and experimenting with some cheap hobbyist pulse induction (PI) metal detector, I found the metal detectors either reject the ferrous metals, that I am interested in detecting, or the range is not so good. In some cases, such as iron powder sample, it does not detect the material at all even though the sample is very magnetic when tested with a permanent magnet.
Questions I have:
- What type of metal detector would be best for detecting ferrous material -- theoretically as well as if there are some product available?
Best => greater depth (for similar coil size) or more sensitivity to ferrous material than other; discrimination of other metals like gold, silver, aluminum (this sounds like opposite of what most metal detectors dobut iron is like gold for me in this case
)
- With pulse induction metal detector, I could detect small concrete sample (1.5 inch x 1.5 inch x 18 inch) with some steel fiber ( 0.5% by volume -- which would be around ten to twelve 1 inch long steel fibers randomly distributed) up to distance of 6 inches. However, similar sample with iron filling (Fe3O4) is not detected at all. I believe the eddy current generation is very small in iron fillings because of their physical dimension or perhaps due to random orientation they cancel each other. However, when I test with permanent magnet the iron filling sample is more attracted to it than concrete sample. Are there any other metal detection theories or devices that detects more magnetic material rather than conductive material that can generate eddy current?
Any help or suggestions would be highly appreciated.
Comment