Magnets and Electromagnets: How They Work and Where They’re Used

Magnets and Electromagnets in Technology: Motors, Sensors, and Beyond

How they work (brief)

  • Permanent magnets produce a steady magnetic field from aligned atomic magnetic domains (materials: neodymium, ferrite, alnico).
  • Electromagnets create a magnetic field when electric current flows through a coil; field strength scales with turns, current, and a ferromagnetic core (usually iron).

Motors and actuators

  • Brushless DC (BLDC) and synchronous motors: Permanent magnets on the rotor interact with stator electromagnets to produce torque. Neodymium magnets are common for high power density.
  • Universal and brushed motors: Use electromagnets (field windings) and commutators to switch current direction.
  • Linear actuators and solenoids: Electromagnets convert electrical pulses into linear motion for valves, locks, and relays.

Sensors and transducers

  • Hall-effect sensors: Detect magnetic field strength/position for speed sensors, brushless motor commutation, and proximity sensing.
  • Magnetoresistive and GMR/TMR sensors: Offer high sensitivity for reading data on hard drives, position sensing, and compass modules.
  • Inductive sensors: Use coils and changing magnetic fields to detect metallic objects without contact.

Data storage and communications

  • Hard disk drives: Use tiny magnetic domains on platters and read/write heads (magnetoresistive sensors) to store digital data.
  • Magnetic strips and RFID: Magnetic encoding for cards; RFID uses coils/antennas and magnetic coupling (near-field) or backscatter for passive tags.

Power and energy applications

  • Electric generators: Motion (mechanical rotation) moves magnets relative to coils to induce current (Faraday’s law); both permanent-magnet and electromagnet rotor designs exist.
  • Transformers and inductors: Rely on magnetic cores and coils to transfer and shape AC power in electronics and power distribution.
  • Magnetic levitation (maglev): Uses controlled electromagnets for frictionless transport and magnetic bearings for low-loss rotation.

Medical and scientific uses

  • MRI scanners: Strong superconducting electromagnets create uniform fields to image internal tissues.
  • Magnetic separation and targeted drug delivery (research): Use magnetic fields to manipulate particles or carriers.

Design trade-offs & considerations

  • Strength vs. size: Neodymium offers high strength per volume but can demagnetize at high temps; electromagnets allow field control but need power and cooling.
  • Precision vs. power consumption: Active electromagnets and sensor feedback enable precise control but consume energy; permanent magnets give passive, maintenance-free fields.
  • EM interference (EMI): Motors and coils produce stray fields and electromagnetic noise—requires shielding and filtering in sensitive electronics.
  • Thermal effects: Heat reduces magnet performance and may require thermal management.

Emerging and notable advances

  • High-energy permanent magnets (rare-earth alloys) for lighter, more efficient motors.
  • Advances in magnetoresistive sensors (TMR) improving data density and precision.
  • Electrified transportation (EV motors) and compact, high-torque motor designs relying heavily on modern magnet materials.

If you want, I can:

  • Provide a one-page diagram mapping components (motors, sensors, storage) to magnet types; or
  • Give a short DIY experiment to build a simple electromagnet or demonstrate a Hall sensor in a circuit.

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