46 research outputs found
Metal-to-glass ratio and the Magneto-Impedance of glass-covered CoFeBSi microwires at high frequencies
High frequency [1-500 MHz] measurements of the Magneto-Impedance (MI) of
glass-covered CoFeBSi microwires are carried
out with various metal-to-wire diameter ratios. A twin-peak, anhysteretic
behaviour is observed as a function of magnetic field. A maximum in appears at different values of the frequency , 125, 140 and 85 MHz with
the corresponding diameter ratio = 0.80, 0.55 and 0.32. We describe the
measurement technique and interpret our results with a thermodynamic model that
leads to a clearer view of the effects of on the maximum value of MI and
the anisotropy field.Comment: 5 pages and 6 figure
A Novel Broadband Measurement Method for the Magnetoimpedance of Ribbons and Thin Films
A novel broad-band measurement method of the MI in thin films and ribbons is
presented. It is based on the automated measurement of the reflection
coefficient of a cell loaded with the sample. Illustrative results obtained
with a permalloy multilayer thin film are presented and discussed.Comment: Paper submitted to International Conference on Magnetism (Rome 2003
Electromagnetic Sensors Based on Magnonic Crystals for Applications in the Fields of Biomedical and NDT
AbstractAn exploratory investigation of high sensitivity sensors based on magnonic crystals for the measurement of weak magnetic fields at room temperature is presented. The samples are YIG crystals on GGG substrate (Gadolinium-Gallium-Garnet) on which a periodic structure of shallow grooves are etched or gold stripes are deposited. The excitation of surface magnetostatic spin waves (MSSW) which should appear in these structures is obtained by means of microstrip transmission line or microstrip planar antenna.The measurement of the magnonic structure by complex transmission coefficient (S12) shows a significant shift in frequency of the maximum absorption peak related to magnonic band gap which depends on the magnitude of the DC magnetic bias field applied. It shows the possibility of magnonic high Q-value band gap implementation with respect to spin wave propagation band (GHz band) in magnonic crystals applied to spin waves detection of magnetic fields.The influence of the characteristics of the microstrip line or the microstrip antenna on sensor performance (sensitivity and resolution) is studied
Giant magnetoimpedance in Vitrovac amorphous ribbons over [0.3-400 MHz] frequency range
Giant magneto impedance (GMI) effect for as-cast
Vitrovac amorphous ribbons
(Vacuumschmelze, Germany) in two configurations (parallel and normal to the
ribbon axis) is studied over the frequency range [0.3-400 MHz] and under static
magnetic fields -160 Oe +160 Oe. A variety of peak features and
GMI ratio values, falling within a small field range, are observed and
discussed.Comment: Paper submitted to International Conference on Magnetism 2003 (ICM
Rome 2003
A sinkhole resilient protocol for wireless sensor networks: Performance and security analysis
International audienceThis work focuses on: (1) understanding the impact of selective forwarding attacks on tree-based routing topologies in wireless sensor networks (WSNs), and (2) investigating cryptography-based strategies to limit network degradation caused by sinkhole attacks. The main motivation of our research stems from the following observations. First, WSN protocols that construct a fixed routing topology may be significantly affected by malicious attacks. Second, considering networks deployed in a difficult to access geographical region, building up resilience against such attacks rather than detection is expected to be more beneficial. We thus first provide a simulation study on the impact of malicious attacks based on a diverse set of parameters, such as the network scale and the position and number of malicious nodes. Based on this study, we propose a single but very representative metric for describing this impact. Second, we present the novel design and evaluation of two simple and resilient topology-based reconfiguration protocols that broadcast cryptographic values. The results of our simulation study together with a detailed analysis of the cryptographic overhead (communication, memory, and computational costs) show that our reconfiguration protocols are practical and effective in improving resilience against sinkhole attacks, even in the presence of collusion