Claims
- 1. A magnetic field sensor comprising, as sensing element, a wire made of a stress-sensitive material, wherein said wire is submitted to a longitudinal tensile stress.
- 2. A magnetic field sensor, according to claim 1, wherein said sensing element under stress is a melt-extracted, negative-magnetostriction wire.
- 3. A magnetic field sensor, according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein said sensing element under stress is capable of linear detection of magnetic fields.
- 4. A magnetic field sensor, according to claims 1 or claim 2, wherein said sensing element under stress has memory of its last saturation magnetization state.
- 5. A method for increasing sensitivity in detecting magnetic fields, wherein a wire according to claim 1 or claim 2 is tensed in the longitudinal direction in order to split around the field origin its MI vs field characteristic.
- 6. The method claimed in claim 5, in which the magnitude of the sensitivity for the detection of magnetic fields is controlled by fine tuning the magnitude of the longitudinal tensile stress in order to change the slope of the linear segment of the MI vs field characteristic.
- 7. A method for linearizing the detection of magnetic fields, comprising:
inducing a vanishing helical anisotropy in the wire claimed in claim 1, claim 2 or claim 3, through tensile stress, which results in a linear MI vs field characteristic passing through the zero field axis.
- 8. A method of obtaining a memory element, in which the sensing element claimed in claim 1, claim 2 or claim 4, when under stress, has memory of its last saturation magnetization state.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Appln. No. 60/268702, filed Feb. 15, 2001
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60268702 |
Feb 2001 |
US |