Hi Kingsley,

Are you trying to create a shield for static magnetic fields, or time
variant magnetic fields?

If you want to shield from static magnetic fields, unfortunately the only
thing you can use is Mu-Metal (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu-metal), and
it is expensive.

If you just want to shield from alternating magnetic fields, you can use
any decent electric conductor (in sheet form) which will induce the eddy
currents needed to stop penetration into your shielded environment. In the
past I have seen Copper Clad Plywood used to great effect to build shielded
rooms. You would have to buy the copper sheet metal and plywood separately
and glue them together. The joints need to be sealed with copper tape. The
thickness of copper required depends on the frequencies of interest that
you are trying to block (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skin_effect).

Cheers,
Silas

On Sat, Aug 15, 2015 at 7:54 PM, Kingsley G. Morse Jr. <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hi Felipe,
>
> I enjoyed learning of OpenEMS.
>
> Thanks!
>
> If you happen to know if it could help me design a
> *magnetic* shield for WiFi frequency (2-5 GHz)
> EMF, please let me know.
>
> A chicken wire Faraday cage seems to shield
> electric waves, but the magnetic ones slip through.
>
> Thanks,
> Kingsley
>
> On 08/14/15 16:10, Felipe BM wrote:
> > Hi All,
> >
> > I'm a professor of computational electromagnetics and recently I've been
> > using OpenEMS on my classes and my reasearch with very good results.
> > OpenEMS is a simulation package that runs under Octave/Matlab and its
> based
> > on the Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) method.
> >
> > Although there are a similar packages available on the Debian
> Repositories
> > (i.e. Meep or Tessa), I prefer to use OpenEMS due to its Matlab syntax,
> > which reduces the learning curve for most my students. Also OpenEMS is
> well
> > documented and it is in active development.
> >
> > That's why I'm asking for your help to pack this excellent software. I'm
> > decided to learn and help during this process, although I'm totally
> > ignorant about the Debian packaging process.
> >
> > cheers,
> > Felipe.
> >
> > More info:
> >
> > www.openems.de
> >
> > To install it on a debian machine:
> >
> > Prerequisites:
> >
> > sudo apt-get install build-essential git libhdf5-dev libvtk5-dev
> > libboost-all-dev libcgal-dev libtinyxml-dev libqt4-dev libvtk5-qt4-dev
> >
> > Install:
> > git clone -b stable https://github.com/thliebig/openEMS-Project.gitcd
> > openEMS-Project
> > ./update_openEMS.sh ~/opt/openEMS
>
> --
> Time is the fire in which we all burn.
>
>


-- 
"fork() is the UNIX programmer's hammer. Because it's available, every
problem looks like a nail."

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