Mathematical Model of Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS)

Abstract

Magnetic susceptibility of natural rocks and ores is important in many applications. In a few rock types magnetic susceptibility is independent of the direction in which a weak magnetic field is applied. Such rocks are magnetically isotropic. In most rock types, however, the magnitude of magnetic susceptibility in a constant weak field depends on the orientation of the magnetic field applied. Such rocks are magnetically anisotropic and such directional variation in magnetic susceptibility with these rocks is termed as anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS). Although attempts have been made on describing AMS using mathematical models, there is still a need to present a more consistent and united mathematical process for AMS. This paper presents a united AMS model by rationalizing the existing pieces of different AMS models through a consistent approach. A few examples of AMS from some types of natural rocks and ores are also presented to substantiate this united AMS model.

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Guo, W. (2015) Mathematical Model of Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS). Journal of Applied Mathematics and Physics, 3, 399-404. doi: 10.4236/jamp.2015.34050.

1. Introduction

Magnetic susceptibility of natural rocks and ores plays important roles either directly or indirectly in many applications, such as oil and mineral explorations [1]-[3], geology [4], climate change and environment assessment [5] [6], mining and metallurgy [7] [8], and archeology [9]. However, magnetic susceptibility of many types of rocks and ores is not isotropic, i.e., the magnitude of magnetic susceptibility of some rocks and ores varies with the orientation of the rocks and ores with respect to the measurement of magnetic susceptibility. Such directional variation in magnetic susceptibility with some rocks and ores is termed as anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS).

AMS is a reflection of uneven and directed distribution of ferromagnetic minerals in some rocks and ores during their formation or later deformation by various means. Effect of AMS can be either positive, such as identifying historic structural and tectonic events through magnetic fabrics in the rocks [10]-[12], or negative, such as complicating magnetic modelling of iron-ores hosted in banded iron formations [13] [14].

Some attempts have been made on describing AMS using mathematical models [13]-[17]. However, there is still a need to present a more consistent and united process to describe the mathematical model for AMS. This paper fills the gap by rationalizing the existing pieces of different AMS models through a consistent approach that leads to a united presentation of AMS model. A few examples of AMS from some types of natural rocks and ores are also presented to substantiate this united AMS model.

2. Conceptions of Magnetic Susceptibility and Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS)

Magnetic susceptibility is defined by

(1)

where is the induced magnetization of the material and is the applied magnetic field. As both and, in the Systeme International (SI), are expressed in amperes per meter, volumetric susceptibility is dimensionless, and mass susceptibility is expressed in cubic meters per kilogram. Susceptibility varies as a function of temperature and the strength and frequency of the applied field. In most cases, susceptibility is assumed to be that measured at room temperature (~20˚) and the assumption that versus is linear is generally acceptable in direct current fields of less than 1 mT. In such conditions, experimental procedures are the easiest, allowing rapid measurements, and is a good estimate of the induced magnetization due to the Earth’s magnetic field.

It is important to distinguish extrinsic or measured susceptibility, which is the susceptibility conven- tionally measured by most instruments, from intrinsic susceptibility, which is the true susceptibility after removal of the effects of internal demagnetization fields [13] [14]. The two susceptibilities have a simple rela- tionship:

, (2)

where N is the demagnetization factor. When SI, demagnetization effects are insignificant; thus.

In a few rock types the induced magnetization in symmetrically shaped specimens is independent of the direction in which a weak magnetic field is applied. Such rocks are magnetically isotropic. In most rock types, however, the strength of the induced magnetization in a constant weak field depends on the orientation of a rock sample within the field. Such rocks are magnetically anisotropic. The variation of susceptibility with orientation can be described mathematically in terms of a symmetric second-rank tensor as,

, (3)

Or simply visualized as a susceptibility ellipsoid (Figure 1). This characteristic of rocks is termed the aniso-

Figure 1. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) ellipsoid.

tropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS). A more detailed mathematical description of AMS follows in the next section.

3. Mathematical Description of Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS)

Susceptibility is a second-rank tensor expressed as Equation (3). Because it is symmetric, it can be converted to another specialized orthogonal coordinate system by rotating the coordinates,

, (4)

where, and, along the three axes (1, 2, 3) of the specialized coordinates, or, the eigenvectors of the tensor, are termed the principal susceptibilities, with.

By Equations (1) and (4), in the new coordinates, the populations of induced magnetization are expressed as

(5)

or

(6)

This indicates that the three principal susceptibilities are parallel to their corresponding populations of magnetic field, and no interactions occur among the three orthogonal populations.

We do not normally measure each component of the susceptibility tensor. Instead, we measure the directional susceptibility along the applied magnetic field. For an anisotropic material, assuming there is an angle between the induced magnetization and the applied field, and then the projection of to, or the directional magnetization can be expressed as

. (7)

If the direction cosines of in Cartesian coordinates are:

(8)

Then the directional susceptibility along the applied field can be defined as

. (9)

As, and, Equation (9) can be converted to

(10)

In practice, the susceptibility tensor of a sample can be calculated by means of the least-squares method from a set of measured along different directions. As there are six unknown parameters in Equation (10), readings from at least six positions for a sample are necessary for determining a susceptibility tensor.

Assuming there is a vector that goes through the origin and is parallel to the applied field of and constrained by

, (11)

Then the direction cosines are

(12)

From Equations (10)-(12), the following equation can be determined

. (13)

This is a ternary quadratic polynomial that can be converted to an ellipsoid using the three eigenvectors coincident with the three principal susceptibilities:

. (14)

This is called the magnitude susceptibility ellipsoid or simply the susceptibility ellipsoid. It is a standard ellipsoid with the half-axis length of. The lengths of its three axes coincide with the magnitudes of the three principal susceptibilities. Its shape directly shows the status of AMS (Figure 1).

The output of AMS measurements is the susceptibility ellipsoid defined by the length and orientation of its three principal axes. The parameters usually presented are the bulk susceptibility

, (15)

And the magnetic anisotropy A, lineation L and foliation F as given below

. (16)

The magnetic foliation plane contains the maximum and intermediate susceptibility axes. The magnetic lineation is parallel to the maximum susceptibility axis, so it lies within the foliation plane. The minimum susceptibility axis is normal to the magnetic foliation plane so it can be regarded as the pole to the foliation plane (Figure 1).

4. Examples of AMS of Rocks and Iron Ores

The magnitude of AMS depends on two factors: the anisotropy of individual magnetic particles; and the degree of their alignment. The anisotropy of the individual particles comprises two populations-crystalline and shape anisotropy. The preferred orientation of crystallographic axes commonly controls grain shape and determines the AMS for the vast majority of minerals. However, for a few special rock types, such as banded iron formations (BIFs), ferromagnetic grains are concentrated along some bands. In such cases the magnetic interactions among the ferromagnetic grains can generate an overall magnetic behavior completely different from the behavior of individual grains. This type of anisotropy is often called textural anisotropy [18]-[20]. BIFs have a well-developed magnetic foliation parallel or sub-parallel to bedding, which are shown in Figure 2. In both cases, the pole to the bedding almost coincides to the minimum axis of magnetic susceptibility ellipsoid. The degree of anisotropy of these BIFs is greater than 1.2, meaning the magnitude of the maximum susceptibility is 20% stronger than that of the minimum susceptibility.

High-grade iron ores derived from BIFs have a weak AMS and the average degree of anisotropy is below 1.05 (Figure 3). Compared with AMS of BIFs, these iron ores are generally isotropic in susceptibility although a recognizable sub-bedding-parallel magnetic foliation can be seen.

Basalt and dolomite are weak in magnetism and generally isotropic (Figure 4).

Figure 2. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) of BIFs from Hamersley Province of Western Australia.

Figure 3. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) of high-grade hematite ores hosted in BIFs in Hamersley Province.

Figure 4. Isotropy of magnetic susceptibility of basalt and dolomite in Hamersley Province.

5. Conclusion

This paper presents a united AMS model by rationalizing the existing pieces of different AMS models through a consistent approach. A few examples of AMS from some types of natural rocks and ores are also presented to substantiate this united AMS model. This unified mathematical model serves as a consistent guide for any studies involving AMS.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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