Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
9 months ago
23.11.2024, 18:06 MEZ
Juan,
depending on the frequency range you have in mind the AC/DC or RF modules are needed. In case you want to measure material data such as conductivity and permittivity, which are required for a model, a vector impedance analyzer is needed.
Cheers
Edgar
-------------------
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
Juan,
depending on the frequency range you have in mind the AC/DC or RF modules are needed. In case you want to measure material data such as conductivity and permittivity, which are required for a model, a vector impedance analyzer is needed.
Cheers
Edgar
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
6 months ago
10.02.2025, 11:39 MEZ
Juan,
depending on the frequency range you have in mind the AC/DC or RF modules are needed. In case you want to measure material data such as conductivity and permittivity, which are required for a model, a vector impedance analyzer is needed.
Cheers
Edgar
Edgar,
one more question, if I know the axial and radial conductivity value of a material, how can I introduce it in this matrix, I don't know the order it should take, for example if the axial value is 1 and the radial value is 2, how should the matrix look like considering that I am working in 2D?
>Juan,
>
>depending on the frequency range you have in mind the AC/DC or RF modules are needed. In case you want to measure material data such as conductivity and permittivity, which are required for a model, a vector impedance analyzer is needed.
>
>Cheers
>Edgar
Edgar,
one more question, if I know the axial and radial conductivity value of a material, how can I introduce it in this matrix, I don't know the order it should take, for example if the axial value is 1 and the radial value is 2, how should the matrix look like considering that I am working in 2D?
Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
6 months ago
10.02.2025, 16:46 MEZ
Hi Juan,
you enter the x-, y- and z-component into the matrix diagonal. You must use expressions that transform the cylinder coordinates into cartesian coordinates.
I recommend to define variables in order to keep the entries in the matrix short.
It is quite straightforward but maybe somebody can suggest a more elegant method.
Cheers
Edgar
-------------------
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
Hi Juan,
you enter the x-, y- and z-component into the matrix diagonal. You must use expressions that transform the cylinder coordinates into cartesian coordinates.
I recommend to define variables in order to keep the entries in the matrix short.
It is quite straightforward but maybe somebody can suggest a more elegant method.
Cheers
Edgar