
Magnetic field systems should not be accepted based on datasheets alone.
Before final sign-off, a structured acceptance testing procedure is essential to verify:
- Field strength coefficient
- Uniformity mapping
- Stability
- Noise level
- Repeatability
This article outlines a practical acceptance checklist for electromagnets and Helmholtz coil systems — ensuring performance matches specification before commissioning.
1. Field Strength Coefficient (k = B/I)
The first verification step is confirming the field coefficient: k=BIk = \frac{B}{I}k=IB
This defines how many mT (or T) are generated per ampere.
What to Measure
- Apply multiple current levels (e.g., 20%, 50%, 80% of rated current)
- Measure magnetic field at center
- Verify linearity
Magnetic field fundamentals are described under Wikipedia (Magnetic field):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_field
Acceptance Criteria Example
- Deviation < ±1–2% from specified coefficient
- Linear behavior across operating range
Without confirming B/I ratio, all further tests are unreliable.
2. Uniformity Mapping
Uniformity defines the usable volume of the magnetic field.
Typical Procedure
- Define target region (e.g., 50 mm × 50 mm × 50 mm)
- Use calibrated 3-axis probe
- Map grid points across region
- Calculate maximum deviation
Uniformity formula: Uniformity=Bmax−BminBcenter\text{Uniformity} = \frac{B_{max} – B_{min}}{B_{center}}Uniformity=BcenterBmax−Bmin
Reporting Format
- 2D contour plots
- 3D mapping data
- Numerical maximum deviation (%)
Acceptance documentation should clearly state mapping resolution and probe calibration certificate.
3. Stability Over Time
Field stability determines experimental reproducibility.
Test Method
- Set target current
- Monitor field at center
- Record drift over 1–8 hours
Key parameters:
- Short-term stability (minutes)
- Long-term drift (hours)
- Thermal stabilization time
For water-cooled electromagnets, temperature equilibrium must be reached before measurement.
Acceptance criteria often include:
- Drift < specified ppm/hour
- No step discontinuities
4. Noise Measurement
Noise limits the minimum detectable signal.
Noise sources include:
- Power supply ripple
- Environmental magnetic interference
- Mechanical vibration
Noise evaluation typically involves:
- High-resolution field probe
- FFT spectrum analysis
- Measurement at constant current
Precision instrumentation practices, frequently discussed in IEEE literature, emphasize spectral analysis for electromagnetic system validation:
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/
Acceptance testing should define:
- RMS noise level
- Dominant frequency components
- 50/60 Hz interference magnitude
5. Repeatability Testing
Repeatability ensures that performance remains consistent after power cycling.
Procedure
- Ramp current up to target
- Return to zero
- Repeat multiple cycles
- Measure deviation at identical setpoints
Acceptance criteria example:
- Repeatability error < ±0.5%
Repeatability confirms:
- Magnetic hysteresis behavior
- Mechanical stability
- Control system consistency
6. Thermal Performance Verification
Thermal behavior affects long-term reliability.
Testing includes:
- Coil temperature rise at rated current
- Cooling efficiency verification
- Interlock response under simulated fault
Thermal imaging may be used to detect hotspots.
Overheating reduces insulation lifetime and shifts magnetic characteristics.
7. Documentation Requirements Before Sign-Off
Before final acceptance, ensure the following are provided:
- Calibration certificate for probe
- Uniformity mapping report
- Stability and noise data
- Interlock test record
- Electrical schematic (if required)
- Compliance documentation
A professional magnet supplier delivers both hardware and validation data.
👉 Product Link Placeholder – Cryomagtech Magnetic Field Systems with Acceptance Testing Support
We provide structured acceptance testing procedures and documentation to ensure system verification before commissioning.
8. Why Acceptance Testing Protects Both Sides
For the laboratory:
- Prevents underperforming systems
- Ensures grant compliance
- Protects research timeline
For the supplier:
- Defines measurable performance
- Prevents ambiguous claims
- Strengthens long-term cooperation
Clear acceptance criteria reduce disputes.
Key Takeaways
- Verify field coefficient (B/I ratio)
- Map uniformity within defined volume
- Measure stability over time
- Analyze magnetic noise spectrum
- Confirm repeatability after cycling
- Document everything before sign-off
A magnetic field system is not complete until it is validated.
References
- Wikipedia – Magnetic Field
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_field - IEEE – Electromagnetic system measurement practices
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/