Claims
- 1. A magnetized material having a longitudinal axis formed from a composition comprising magnetic particles in an elastomeric or thermoplastic binder whereby said material has been magnetized by making at least a first magnetic imprint in said material by passing the material through a first flux gap, said flux gap being created in the vicinity of a flux circuit, and making at least a second magnetic imprint in said material by passing the material through a second flux gap, each of said first and second flux gaps having at least two opposite polar moments, and wherein said material is substantially planar and extending along the longitudinal axis, and has a top surface and a bottom surface and wherein said imprint is made by at least partially contacting said top surface with a top array comprising alternating at least one of each of a permanent magnetic disk and a fluxconducting element such that the top array has alternating poles of flux at the circumference of the flux-conducting elements to induce polar moments in the magnetic imprint, and at least partially contacting said bottom surface with a bottom array comprising alternating at least one of each of a permanent magnetic disk and a flux-conducting element such that the bottom array has alternating poles of flux at the circumference of the flux-conducting elements, said flux-conducting elements having polar moments to induce polar moments in said imprint, and the polar moments of one array opposing the polar moments of the other array, and the first magnetic imprint being offset relative to said second magnetic imprint a distance X in a lateral direction across the material and perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of said material and a distance y in a longitudinal direction along the longitudinal axis of said material and wherein X and y are greater than 0.
- 2. A material as set forth in claim 1, wherein said material is biased to one of said magnetic arrays of the second set.
- 3. A material as set forth in claim 1 in which the distance x equals the thickness of one of said flux-conducting elements.
- 4. A material as set forth in claim 1 in which there are three laterally offset magnetic imprints.
- 5. A material as set forth in claim 4 where the distance x which is the lateral offset distance between the first and the second set of arrays is less than the width of one full polar moment and the third imprint has at least one partial polar moment centered between the polar imprints of the first and the second arrays.
- 6. A material as set forth in claim 5 wherein the third imprint is biased toward one of the arrays of the third set of arrays.
- 7. A material as set forth in claim 1, wherein said material is in the form of a sheet or strip.
- 8. A material as set forth in claim 1, wherein said magnetic particles comprise a hard ferrite or low coercivity rare earth magnet.
- 9. A material as set forth in claim 8, wherein said magnetic particles comprise one or more materials selected from the group consisting of barium ferrite, strontium ferrite, lead ferrite, and neodymium boron-iron magnets.
- 10. A material as set forth in claim 9, wherein said binder is one or more materials selected from the group consisting of chlorinated and chlorosulfonated polyethylene, polyisobutylene, nitrile rubbers, rubbers made from ethylene propylene and ethylene propylene diene monomers, ethylene vinyl acetate, acrylate rubbers, and copolymers or blends of the same.
- 11. A material as set forth in claim 10, wherein said magnetic particles comprise from about 50 to about 70 volume percent of said composition.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 07/869,414, filed on Apr. 14, 1992, is now abandoned by Raymond C. Srail, Richard A. Glover, Thomas R. Szczepanski, Eric M. Weissman, and Frederic W. Kunig, for "Magnetized Material Having Enhanced Magnetic Pull Strength and a Process and Apparatus for the Multipolar Magnetization of the Material."
US Referenced Citations (14)
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
869414 |
Apr 1992 |
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