
Achieving high magnetic field uniformity in electromagnets is often one of the most challenging aspects of system design.
In many laboratory setups, the magnetic field is already close to the desired specification—but still slightly outside acceptable limits.
In such cases, pole face shaping and shimming techniques provide practical methods to improve field uniformity without redesigning the entire magnet system.
Why Uniformity Is Hard to Perfect
Magnetic field uniformity is affected by:
- pole geometry
- air gap size
- magnetic material properties
- edge effects
Even well-designed electromagnets exhibit field deviations near the edges of the pole faces.
Background on magnetic field distribution:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_field
These edge effects often limit the usable uniform region.
1. Understanding Edge Effects
Magnetic flux tends to spread outward at the edges of pole faces.
This results in:
- reduced field strength near edges
- non-uniform gradients
- distortion of the central field region
The larger the pole gap or sample volume, the more significant these effects become.
2. Pole Face Shaping: Designing for Better Uniformity
Pole face shaping modifies the geometry of the pole surface to improve field distribution.
Common Shaping Techniques
Flat Pole Faces
- simplest design
- limited uniformity region
Chamfered Edges
- reduces edge field concentration
- smooths field gradients
Contoured (Profiled) Poles
- optimized shapes based on simulation
- improves uniformity over larger volumes
These shapes are often designed using finite element simulations before fabrication.
Trade-Offs
Pole shaping improves uniformity but may:
- reduce peak field strength
- increase manufacturing complexity
Engineering design must balance these factors.
3. Shimming: Fine Adjustment After Installation
Shimming is used when:
The magnet is already built, but uniformity is slightly off.
Instead of redesigning the poles, small ferromagnetic pieces (shims) are added to adjust the field locally.
How Shimming Works
Shims modify the local magnetic field by:
- redirecting magnetic flux
- compensating for field deficits or excess
This allows fine tuning of the field distribution.
Types of Shims
- thin steel plates
- shaped compensation pieces
- adjustable shim assemblies
Placement is typically near:
- pole edges
- regions with known field deviation
4. Measurement and Iteration Process
Shimming is not a one-step process.
It involves measurement → adjustment → re-measurement.
Step 1: Field Mapping
Measure the magnetic field across the region of interest using:
- Hall probes
- fluxgate sensors
Step 2: Identify Error Regions
Determine where:
- field is too high
- field is too low
Step 3: Apply Shims
Place shims strategically to compensate for deviations.
Step 4: Iterate
Repeat measurement and adjustment until the desired uniformity is achieved.
This iterative approach is essential for high-precision systems.
5. Practical Considerations
Effective shimming requires attention to:
- symmetry of adjustments
- repeatability of placement
- mechanical stability
Poorly placed shims can:
- introduce new distortions
- reduce system stability
6. When to Use Shaping vs Shimming
Pole Face Shaping
Best for:
- initial design phase
- large uniformity improvements
Shimming
Best for:
- post-installation adjustment
- fine-tuning performance
In practice, both methods are often used together.
7. System-Level Optimization
Uniformity is not determined by poles alone.
Other factors include:
- coil alignment
- current stability
- thermal conditions
Cryomagtech supports electromagnet systems with optimized pole design and field mapping guidance to achieve high uniformity performance.
Combining design optimization with practical shimming techniques ensures that systems meet demanding uniformity requirements.
Key Takeaways
- Magnetic field uniformity is limited by edge effects and geometry
- Pole face shaping improves uniformity at the design stage
- Shimming enables fine adjustment after installation
- Field mapping and iterative tuning are essential
- System-level factors also influence uniformity
Achieving high uniformity is often not about redesigning the magnet—but about carefully refining it.