Ferrofluid-based Stretchable Magnetic Core Inductors

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Abstract

Magnetic materials are commonly used in inductor and transformer cores to increase inductance density. The emerging field of stretchable electronics poses a new challenge since typical magnetic cores are bulky, rigid and often brittle. This paper presents, for the first time, stretchable inductors incorporating ferrofluid as a liquid magnetic core. Ferrofluids, suspensions of nanoscale magnetic particles in a carrier liquid, provide enhanced magnetic permeability without changing the mechanical properties of the surrounding elastomer. The inductor tested in this work consisted of a liquid metal solenoid wrapped around a ferrofluid core in separate channels. The low frequency inductance was found to increase from 255 nH before fill to 390 nH after fill with ferrofluid, an increase of 52%. The inductor was also shown to survive uniaxial strains of up to 100%.

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Lazarus, N., & Meyer, C. D. (2015). Ferrofluid-based Stretchable Magnetic Core Inductors. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 660). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/660/1/012007

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