Thermal Model of an Omnimagnet for Performance Assessment and Temperature Control
Fateme Esmailie, Matthew S. Cavilla, Jake J. Abbott, Tim A. Ameel

TL;DR
This paper introduces a validated transient heat transfer model for Omnimagnets, enabling performance assessment and temperature control to prevent device failure due to overheating.
Contribution
A novel, computationally efficient transient heat transfer model for Omnimagnets is developed and validated, facilitating real-time temperature management and safety optimization.
Findings
The model achieves a maximum RMS error of 8% (4°C) against experimental data.
Increasing convective heat transfer improves operational time.
The model can be integrated into real-time control systems like Kalman filters.
Abstract
An Omnimagnet is an electromagnetic device that enables remote magnetic manipulation of devices such as medical implants and microrobots. It is comprised of three orthogonal nested solenoids with a ferromagnetic core at the center. Electrical current within the solenoids leads to Joule heating, resulting in undesired temperature increase within the Omnimagnet. If the temperature exceeds the melting point of the wire insulation, device failure will occur. Thus, a study of heat transfer within an Omnimagnet is a necessity, particularly to maximize the performance of the device. For the first time, a transient heat transfer model, that incorporates all three heat transfer modes, is proposed and validated with experimental data for an Omnimagnet with maximum root mean square error equal to 8 (4C). This transient model is not computationally expensive. It is relatively easy…
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