Metal Detector Basics and Theory
Metal Detector Basics and Theory
Metal Detector Basics and Theory
1. Basic operation.
Written by Bruce Candy. 1 Metal detectors work on the principle of transmitting a magnetic eld and analyzing a return signal from the target and environment. The transmitted magnetic eld varies in time, usually at rates of fairly high-pitched audio signals. The magnetic transmitter is in the form of a transmit coil with a varying electric current owing through it produced by transmit electronics. The receiver is in the form of a receive coil connected to receive and signal processing electronics. The transmit coil and receive coil are sometimes the same coil. The coils are within a coil housing which is usually simply called the coil, and all the electronics are within the electronics housing attached to the coil via an electric cable and commonly called the control box. This changing transmitted magnetic eld causes electric currents to ow in metal targets. These electric currents are called eddy currents, which in turn generate a weak magnetic eld, but their generated magnetic eld is different from the transmitted magnetic eld in shape and strength. It is the altered shape of this regenerated magnetic eld that metal detectors use to detect metal targets. (The different shape may be in the form of a time delay.) The regenerated magnetic eld from the eddy currents causes an alternating voltage signal at the receive coil. This is amplied by the electronics because relatively deeply buried targets produce signals in the receive coil which can be millions of times weaker than the signal in the transmit coil, and thus need to be amplied to a reasonable level for the electronics to be able to process. In summary: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Transmit signal from the electronics causes transmit electrical current in transmit coil. Electrical current in the transmit coil causes a transmitted magnetic eld. Transmitted magnetic eld causes electrical currents to ow in metal targets (called eddy currents.) Eddy currents generate a magnetic eld. This eld is altered compared to the transmitted eld. Receive coil detects the magnetic eld generated by eddy currents as a very small voltage. Signal from receive coil is amplied by receive electronics, then processed to extract signal from the target, rather than signals from other environment magnetic sources such as earths magnetic eld.
As with most introductions, the above brief description is over-simplied. The signal induced in the receive coil, by the magnetic eld of the eddy current, can be thought of as made up of two simultaneous components, not just an altered component: One component is the same shape as the transmit signal. This is called the reactive signal (X). Because it is the same shape as the transmit eld, the signal, by denition, responds immediately to what ever the transmit signal is doing. When this X component is subtracted from the eddy current induced signal in the receive coil, the shape of the remaining signal depends only upon the history of the transmitted eld, and not the instantaneous value. This signal is called the resistive or loss component (R). Both the target X and R signals vary depending on the distance of the target from the coil; the further away, the weaker the transmitted magnetic eld at the object, and the weaker the received signal from the eddy currents; thus the weaker the receive coil R and X signals which, as stated, may be very weak for deep targets.
1 Bruce Candy:
Co-founder of Minelab. Pre-Minelab: designed advanced communication electronics (linear HF transmitters, VHF radar transmitters and receivers, ultra fast-frequency hopping etc), ultrasonic cleaners, fast photon counters, light detection. Designed concepts, analogue electronics and discriminator algorithms of Minelab detector (e.g. GS15000, GT/FT/XT. Eureka Gold series, Musketeer, Sovereign, PI units, Explorer series, Excalibur). Designed Halcro audio ampliers. Holds patents in metal detecting and audio elds.
The received signal is usually processed by the electronics to produce at least 2 signals: the strength of one signal is proportional to the R signal strength or magnitude, but is no longer an alternating signal. Similarly, the other signal is also not an alternating signal, but rather a signal simply related to X signal strength or magnitude only. Unfortunately, both the terms X signal and R signal may refer to both these two different meanings: the one meaning referring to the alternating receive signal at the transmit frequency, and the other meaning to the strength of the received signals or magnitude (how big they are). So the term X signal may refer to the alternating X signal waveform at the transmit frequency, or just the X signal strength or magnitude, which of course changes as the coil is moved about over different areas of ground. The same applies to the R signal. This dual meaning of the same term is common in electronics. For example, when referring to a received medium-wave signal, it is not always clear if an engineer is referring to the signal at the medium-wave frequency, or its varying magnitude; namely, the information transmitted regardless of the transmit frequency. In metal detectors, the terms X and R signal, usually refer to their magnitudes, not the alternating signals. These X and R signals (magnitudes) are further processed to give an output signal which may be reported to an operator in a number of different ways, the two most common being: 1. a ground balanced audio signal, whose loudness is usually proportional to the received signal strength from the eddy currents in metal targets. 2. a discriminated signal which only makes an audio beep when a target with selected properties is detected. These properties may be varied by a metal detector operator varying the controls of the metal detector. Most discriminating metal detectors also have a visual display which indicates properties of a detected metal target.
In gold, de-mining or UXO (Unexploded Ordinance) detectors, the ground-balanced signal is the most important, and for coin and treasure detectors, the discriminated signal is the most important.
Figure 1. Transmit signal, receive X and receive R at the receive coil, X magnitude, R magnitude. (The rates of change of magnitudes are exaggerated for the sake of clarity.)
small bits of aluminium foil, ne jewellery chains, small old Roman coins, US dime (small 10c coin), solid US civil war bronze belt buckle, solid Bronze Age axe head, large gold ingot, or large thick copper or aluminium plate.
short
long
Gold nuggets cover a very large range of time constants, from very short to longish. However, it should be noted that even large gold nuggets mostly produce relatively short time constants compared to similar sized man-made metal targets of high conductivity, because of the way gold nuggets are formed; they have many voids and impurities which signicantly reduce conductivity and inductance.
Figure 2. Different time constant non-ferrous targets, ferrous and soil signals at the receive coil relative to the transmit signal. Indicated signal strengths are arbitrary, and different for clarity.
The magnetic properties of ferrous targets cause them to have a high inductance. This is because the magnetic eld created by the eddy currents is made stronger by the magnetic property of the ferrous targets. In effect, this amplied magnetic eld makes the inductance of the target higher. So, even though most ferrous targets may have poor electrical conductivity, they usually have long time constants because of their high inductance. Only pieces of steel or iron that have almost completely rusted through, or extremely thin steel wire have short time constants 2 (e.g. highly rusty steel/iron akes or very thin staples.) However, some mildly ferrous targets may also have short time constants, e.g. some mildly ferrous coins or weakly magnetic stainless steel, and some plated steel targets too. Most coin detectors may be set to select various ranges of non-ferrous time constants. For example, the old pull tabs of soft drink and beer metal cans have moderately short time constants in a fairly narrow range. This time constant range may be discriminated against, but targets with differing time constants will still be detected. This range may be selected by a notch discriminator control. However, other targets with time constants very similar to the pull-tab time constant range will also not be detected, so some care should be taken in setting the discriminator controls. The most common discriminator setting is to discriminate against ferrous targets and the shortest time constant non-ferrous targets.
In contrast, surface soils which have remained surface soils for a long time often have high mineralisation, because the action of water, over a long period, causes iron compounds to migrate to the surface. For example, Australia has old soils, having had no glaciers recently or signicant mountains to be eroded. Some volcanic rocks or sands, known as black sands, may be highly mineralised and are found, for example, in a few USA mainland and Hawaii areas. These black sands (or rocks) are made of mostly magnetite, an iron oxide called ferrite. These typically produce almost entirely X signals, and almost no R. They are heavy, that is they have a high density, and can be identied because they are strongly attracted to a magnet. Small roundish magnetite/maghemite pebbles (a few mm in diameter) are also attracted to a magnet. These, for example, may be found in many Australian goldelds, but do produce signicant R signals. Thus, USA goldelds are typically different from Australian goldelds: The USA soils are mostly mildly mineralised but in some areas may contain either nearly pure magnetite black sands or rocks, which are problematic for metal detectors as they have very high X components (strongly attracted to magnets). Australian gold elds have highly mineralised soils, but very few black sands or rocks that contain nearly pure X magnetite. The magnetic materials are in the forms of magnetite-rich small pebbles and rock coatings, clays and general sandy soils. These all contain magnetic materials that produce high levels of X signals as well as R. The ratio of X and R is random, and the R component arises from extremely small magnetic particles called superparamagnetic materials, which are discussed below.
Figure 3. Minelabs FBS transmitted frequency spectrum. Note the large number of frequencies.
There are substantial differences between gold detectors, which lie mainly in the differences in their ability to reduce the signals due to mineralisation of the soil. This is because, in the most productive goldelds, the concentration of interfering mineralisation signals are extremely intense and thus limit detection depth. As stated earlier, mineralisation produces a large X component and a much smaller R component. Unfortunately X and R are unrelated and their relationship varies randomly from one location to the next. Salty soils produce R signals from the mineralisation, as well as from the salt conductivity. However, most goldelds do not have salty soils, and in these non-salty soils, the soil R/X ranges from about 0.5% to some extreme hot rocks with R/X about 5%. However, the nearly pure magnetite black sands and rocks exhibit very low values of R/X; <0.1%. In very highly mineralised soils, such as Australian goldelds, median soil R/X is between 0.5% and 1%, but this ratio varies from location to location. Some non-salty non-goldeld soils have R/X as high as about 10%. Because of the soil R component, it is not possible to simply detect a metal target by detecting R without a great deal of interfering ground signal, so a technique called ground balancing needs to be employed to reduce the R signal due to the soil.
Figure 4. Graph of manual ground balance once at 0, versus auto ground balance. Fixed, manual and automatic GB signals are amplied by 100 times for visual clarity.
Historical note: Minelab was the rst company to produce a genuine automatic ground tracking gold detector, the GT16000. Interestingly, at the time many prospectors initially rejected the product, because they suspected that it could not do the job as well as they could. It took some persuasion by demonstration and experience to change their minds. However, to some extent their suspicions were not wholly ill-founded; the automatic action could track out faint targets as mentioned previously, but only if the coil is passed back and fourth over the faint target signal, and then only with relatively short sweeps. For this reason it was, and still is, important that prospectors turn off the automatic ground balance when sweeping back and fourth over a suspected target. The correct procedure is for the operator to automatic ground balance a short distance away from the suspected target, turn the automatic ground balance off to use xed ground balance, then detect over the suspected target (from many different directions). Only use the automatic ground balance when searching for new undetected targets. 3. Pulse Induction (PI) detectors. In 1995 Minelab PI detectors set a new benchmark for nding gold and landmines deeper in highly mineralised soils. PI technology is very similar to the ignition system of an internal combustion engine. A transmit voltage (e.g. 6 volts) is applied to a transmit coil which produces a transmitted magnetic eld. This magnetic eld is suddenly turned off ( this is when the spark occurs in the ignition system). After the magnetic eld is stopped a period occurs when the metal detector measures a receive signal produced by a magnetic eld from the environment. During this receiving period, there are no X components, only R, because X only responds to the transmitted eld which has been stopped. These R signals come from 2 sources: The eddy currents in a metal target dying down and thus their generated magnetic eld decaying in strength. The magnetisation of the mineralised soil, caused by the magnetising transmitted eld, decaying in strength. Fortunately, most mineralised soils demagnetize in a predictable way following the magnetizing transmitted eld, so it is possible to subtract this predictable signal from the received signal, thus only detecting metal target signals, which as commented earlier, may have any decay rate from very fast to slow. There being no soil X component during the receive signal period has two advantages: Soil X is unrelated to soil R as their relationship is random and, as soil R is predictable during the receive period, it can be cancelled without having to deal with a randomly related soil component such as X. Soil X is much bigger than soil R and, indeed, X is very large in highly mineralised soils, so it is much easier for the electronics to cope with the very much smaller soil R component in isolation than when it is produced simultaneously with very large X components.
Unlike PI technology, using multi-frequency sine-waves or rectangular waveforms for example, has to cope with both soil X and soil R simultaneously which, as stated, is difcult. In summary, the order of improved target detection in mineralised soils is: 1. Detection of target X signal:- very poor because of extremely large soil X signal. 2. Detection of target R signal:- roughly 100 times better than point 1, but there is still the problem of large soil R signal. 3. Manually ground balanced R signal:- very roughly more than 10 times better than point 2, but R/X still changes from location to location. 4. Automatic ground balance:- roughly about 50% better than point 3, but ground signals are still signicant because of random R/X. 5. Minelab gold and de-mining PI systems:- hundreds of times better than point 4 in highly mineralised goldelds, depending upon R/X variability and concentration of mineralisation.
Figure 5; After ltering, note the much larger value of target R signal to either the small soil R or very small ground balanced R, and also the larger soil X signal compared to target X.
its strength at 2 metres, by 1,0002 = 1,000,000 times weaker. Of course the transmitters cited above are considerably more powerful than a mobile phone and hence still may cause problems; the very powerful radars up to about a mile away, and the less powerful transmitters, up to about 100 metres (or yards) away, if that. As radars have very intense peak powers with highly directional antennas, which direct all their energy in a narrow beam, they tend to be worse than other transmitters but, nevertheless, usually produce no effects in metal detectors when more than about a mile away. If one is this close to a powerful transmitter, it is very likely that one is also near mains electricity, so it is hard to tell which source is the dominant source of interference. Generally one can tell, because mains can be tuned out, but usually not the powerful transmitters. As these very powerful transmitters are few and far between, there are very few locations where they present a problem. Figure 8 receive coils or the cancel mode of some Minelab models will eliminate the effects of magnetic sources of interference (mains, TVs, other detectors, sferics described below etc), but not strong electromagnetic high frequency radio signals such as radars etc. So, check with a gure 8 receive coil or the cancel mode; if the interference is unaffected, then the source may well be from a powerful transmitter such as a radar, but if the interferences ceases with the gure 8 coil or cancel mode, it is not from a radar etc. The principal atmospheric sources are: Lightning. This is the main source of problems for prospectors or de-mining operators with highly sensitive detectors far from mains sources (>100 metres or yards away). Lightning signals may travel thousands of km (miles) and are known as sferics. Because there are hundreds of strikes per second in the world, the interference, when signicant, is effectively continuous, and as the sferic pulses are broadband (i.e. all frequencies), cannot be tuned out by a change in metal detector frequency. Sferics is manifest through an apparently random unstable threshold and, on some occasions, with loud transients. As there is much more lightning in tropical and subtropical regions, these areas suffer the most from this source, especially during wet seasons. Owing to the way the sferic electromagnetic waves propagate around the world, the magnetic eld is horizontal, so when the coil is horizontal (as it mostly is), sferic signals are usually not a problem. However, when coils are tilted (as they are on a hill side), this source can be troublesome. Alternatively, some magnetite or maghemite rich mounds, banks, hills etc, may direct the sferic magnetic eld away from the horizontal slightly, and so detecting near these may cause sferic interference even when the coil is horizontal. Note that the intensity of sferics varies very considerable from place-to-place, season-to-season, day-to-day, and even hour-to-hour. With the plane of the coil vertical, the detector may be used as a sferic direction nder for relatively close thunderstorms (e.g. < a thousand km away). The main direction of the sferic waves is perpendicular to the plane of the coil that gives least interference. However, the sferics is often from all directions, and so orientation (with the plain of the coil vertical) has little effect on signal strength. Generally speaking, the sferic signal has two components; isolated transients from closer lightning, e.g. several per minute, or once every few minutes, and a general continuous random weaker back ground from distant lightning (tens/hundreds of weak broadband pulses per second). Usually there is a mixture of both, but sometimes one type or the other dominates. The spectrum of sferics that usually affects metal detectors ranges from about 5kHz to a about 200kHz. There usually is a very broad spectral peak at several tens of kHz . As this frequency range is fundamental to the operation of PI detectors, and the gains of the Minelab units are very high with very low-noise amplifying electronics, it is unfortunately impossible to lter out this continuously random, very broadband, source. One has to use a far-eld balanced coil to eliminate sferics e.g. a gure 8 receive coil, or the cancel option on the Minelab detectors. Long conductors (e.g. > a few hundred metres or yards) such as phone lines or wire fences, and even mains lines. These act as antennas which amplify sferic signals well and transform the magnetic eld to a more vertical eld, which a horizontal coil may detect well up to 10 metres/yards away, depending on the length of the cable, level of sferics etc. Note that, near the ends of these long conductors, the magnetic eld is weak, but far from the ends (e.g. middle), is much stronger. These long cable antennas are most effective when they traverse hills, even if not steep, rather than reside entirely on a horizontal plain. Sometimes the main source of interference from long electrical cabling is from amplied sferics, rather than mains current harmonics! Another source may on occasions be static electricity charged prospectors discharging via their detector coils through conductive vegetation on low humidity days. The conductive vegetation is usually green moist plants. The voltages involved are considerable and of the order of 10kVolts, and these transient discharges are difcult to eliminate. Sometimes wind borne charged particles are blamed for continuous background interference, but this source is not signicant. Almost always the real culprit for continuous
background interference is sferics, mains and very occasionally, radars etc. To determine the source of interference, change the orientation of the plane of the coil from horizontal to vertical. If the interference increases dramatically, the source may be sferics. Alternatively, check with a gure 8 receive coil or the cancel mode; if the interference is unaffected, then the source may well be from static (or radars etc), but if the interference ceases with the gure 8 coil or cancel mode, its source is not from static, but magnetic elds. In summary, 1. Mains electricity, including TVs, is a major source of interference to very sensitive PI detectors and, to a much lesser extent, coin detectors. This interference may extend up to 100 metres (yards) or so, but this is very variable depending on the particular interference. 2. Nearby operating metal detectors may cause interference. 3. Ignition systems and electric fences. 4. Far from mains (>100 metres or so), the major source is sferics. 5. Sferics are amplied by fence lines or any long conductor (e.g. phone lines). 6. Interference from static electricity, or radio transmitters, especially radars, is rare. 7. To determine whether any source is magnetic or not, check with a gure 8 receive coil or cancel mode. If the problem is absent with this coil or mode, the source is magnetic. However, if the use of a gure 8 receive coil or cancel mode does not reduce the interference, then the source is non-magnetic, but is probably transmitters or static electricity.. The following table lists the differences between the most common man-made interference, mains electricity, and the most common natural interference, sferics. Property Sound Tuning Coil orientation Mains Distinct pulsing; usually varies slowly in rate (frequency of pulsing) Can be very effectively tuned out. Usually fairly independent on whether the coil is horizontal or vertical. Sferics Random unstable threshold, sometimes with occasional short-duration pulses. Tuning makes absolutely no difference Highly dependent on whether the coil is horizontal or not. Even small deviations from the horizontal will increase interference very signicantly (unless near a long electrical conductor; e.g. fence)
Figure 6. Logarithm of receive signal strength for an 11 mono-loop with distance from the centre of the coil. Note that the signal is close to being a 1/z6 law for distances greater than 40cm.
Thus, suppose that the winding radius a is 12.5cm (11) mono-loop, and a small target is on the central target axis; then, the target signal will decrease by several hundred thousand times from the coil to 1metre away as shown in the gure. As an example in the 1/z6 region, an increase in depth of 12% will result in the signal halving in strength, and an increase of 47%, that is say 40cm to 59cm, results in the signal being 10 times smaller.
Different technologies.
Metal detectors transmit a variety of different waveforms all with different advantages and disadvantages. The most common waveform is VLF which is basically a single frequency sine-wave. The next most common is PI, the basics of which are given in section 1.2.1. Minelabs Broad Band Spectrum and Full Band Spectrum products transmit yet another waveform which is composed of multi-period rectangular-waves. Denitions given below: = L/r = mean metal target time constant, where L is the effective mean target series inductance and r the effective mean target series resistance. = 2/ = frequency of target resistive component (R) peak value (characteristic frequency). t = time variable.
Vo2/(2+o2), for a sinusoidal transmitted signal of frequency wo and strength V. (Actually, the sign of X is negative.) The following gure shows this relationship graphically.
Figure 7. VLF X and R responses to a rst-order time constant target versus transmit frequency o/.
In essence, the resistive component has a broad peak at o = 2/ (frequency=1 in the gure), whereas the reactive X component has a relatively fast transition centred about o = 2/. The resistive component is associated with energy loss (electrical heating in the target) and the reactive component X is the extent to which the target reects the transmitted magnetic eld by eddy current re-transmission without losing energy. Loosely speaking, this is diamagnetic-like, although from a scientic point of view, diamagnetic usually means something else. At high applied frequencies (o>>), the reection is near 100% and the transmitted magnetic eld applied to the target does not effectively enter the target. At low applied frequencies (o<<), metal targets are approximately transparent to the transmitted applied eld, and at o = 2/ half the energy of the applied transmitted eld is reected and half absorbed. However, if a metal target is ferrous, then the target has two competing magnetic X components; the same eddy current diamagnetic component as in non-ferrous targets, with negative X values, and a ferromagnetic component which enhances the magnetic eld with positive X values, (very loosely speaking, a kind of opposite of diamagnetic). The ferromagnetic component alone, excluding any eddy current contribution, is approximately independent of frequency at typical metal detector frequencies o. At low frequency applied elds (o<<), the target looks magnetic (ferrous), as the diamagnetic component is approximately zero and the ferromagnetic component dominates. At high frequencies (o>>), the reection is near 100% and the transmitted magnetic eld applied to the target mostly does not enter the target because the eddy currents are constrained to the targets surfaces; this is called the skin effect. Thus the magnetic eld does not encounter the bulk internal ferrous nature of the target but, rather, only the surface ferrous components which are much smaller in magnitude than the diamagnetic eddy current component. Hence, for ferrous targets, the X component changes sign from ferromagnetic (+X) to diamagnetic (-X) or from ferrous (+X) to apparently non-ferrous (-X) at a particular frequency wo. It follows that a problem with ferrous discrimination of large ferrous targets, having long mean time constants, is that the possible larger diamagnetic response may make a detector indicate that the target is non-ferrous. Another problem of discrimination is when large targets are close to the coil. Receive coils are nulled relative to the transmitted eld, that is, the transmitted eld half induces a positive transmit magnetic eld contribution to the receive coil and half induces a negative transmit magnetic eld contribution to the receive coil. If the target is mostly within the region of the positive transmit magnetic eld contribution to the receive coil, then the received signal contributes mostly positively to the receive signal, both for X and R. Similarly if the target is mostly within the region of the negative transmit magnetic eld contribution to the receive coil, then the received signal contributes mostly negatively to the receive signal, again both for X and R. Because both X and R present the same relative signs in each region, the ferrous/non-ferrous nature is assessed to be the same in both regions. Many targets are not symmetrical, though, and the location within the target which produces the biggest R signal is often not in the same location of the biggest X signal. A problem occurs when the different location of the target dominant R signal adds a receive signal in the opposite sign sense to the dominant X of the target. This makes the metal detector respond in the reverse ferrous/non-ferrous sense to the target when it is in the coils sign-reversing region.
Luckily, this region is small in size so the detector should respond mostly correctly. However, one may falsely think that the detector has located a non-ferrous target amongst ferrous targets when a large ferrous target is close to the coil , or worse, that a large gold nugget close to the coil is ferrous! Hence, great care should be taken when large targets are close to the coil.
For time constant discrimination, just R or ground balanced R from at least two frequencies can be used for accurate determination with minimal soil X interference:
Figure 8. For a target characteristic frequency w = 2/, the resistive component R is different for each transmitted frequency.
For example, 28nm magnetite particles at 20C behave superparamagnetically with an exponential decay of about 1 minute, but slightly larger viscous particles may exhibit amazingly longer decays: magnetite particles of about 32nm exhibit decays of the order of an hour, and particles of size 37nm decay over a time of about a billion years! However, at an elevated temperature of 100C, the 32nm particles will exhibit a time constant of <1minute! Viscous single domain particles with a random particle size distribution, that is, resulting from a log-uniform time-constant distribution, will show a logarithmic magnetic decay for a magnetic step function (the 1/t component in the PI response given below). Interestingly, superparametric grains are employed biologically: Some birds with excellent navigation have a membrane surrounding a superparamagnetic ferrouid containing approximately 3nm magnetite crystals suspended in a liquid. The magnetic eld distorts the ferrouid and thus the membrane to an ellipsoidal shape with the long axis aligned with the eld. Nerve bres sense this shape change and associated change in osmotic pressure across the membrane, thus enabling a sense of terrestrial magnetism.6 Most single-domain particles are not viscous, as they are too large to be thermally bumped out of magnetic alignment. Thus, they may exhibit stable magnetism. The more slowly decaying particles will produce an X response in metal detectors because of their slowness compared to the transmit frequency. Most of the X component arises from particles bigger than the superparamagnetic particle range that decay at rates much slower than the transmit fundamental frequency, or are magnetically stable. These materials detected as X only consist of the slower viscous particles, stable single domain particles, pseudo single domains, and multi-domains. Superparamagnetic particles exhibit both X and R responses during the transmit on period in PI detectors for similar reasons why a metal target does in a VLF detector as described above, except that the time constant distribution is log-uniform over the effective time-constant range of the receive circuitry. There are many superparamagnetic materials; magnetite, maghemite and titano-hematite particles being the most common. Superparamagnetic particles ideally exhibit no hysteresis, and thus no remanent magnetism, and they magnetically saturate easily (compared to multi-domains or even pseudo single domains). Saturate means that the received signal is not linearly related to the transmitted magnetic eld; if the eld doubles in strength at a particular magnetic domain in the soil, the X and R received response do not double, which they would were the relationship linear. This saturation causes the mathematics of the soil decay response given below to lose accuracy. This is because the different sized particles saturate differently. This means that there is no straightforward way of accurate ground balance. The magnetic strength to cause noticeable saturation to a sensitive metal detector depends on the magnetic chemical. Most of the superparamagnetic particles found in the goldelds require intense elds to cause saturation whereas, ironically, some more benign mineralised soils saturate more easily, and thus may cause worse spurious signals than the highly mineralised goldelds. Double-D coils are excellent for suppressing the effects of near-surface saturation, whereas mono-loops are poor at this. Thus, this saturation can most easily be noticed when using a mono-loop coil as one pumps the coil up and down, causing varying eld strength in the soil. In easily saturable soils, good ground balance is not possible because of saturation, whereas accurate ground balance may be achieved in soils that require more intense elds to cause saturation. However, the Minelab GPX- 4000 (Smooth and Specic modes), and de-mining detectors (F3 and HSTAMIDS) uniquely provide modes insensitive to saturation effects, so mono-loops can be used in saturable soils with these Minelab units without problems. As implied above, all soils and particularly hot rocks, do exhibit a very small degree of R frequency dependence, because the superparamagnetic decay time distribution is not perfectly log-uniform over the range which effect metal detectors. The soils and hot rocks
5 It would be a mistake to assume that because the time constant of a particular size superparamagnetic particle is highly temperature dependent, that the soils response is also highly
temperature dependent. Basically, as the temperature changes, so too does the size of the particles contributing to a particular time constant merely change, right across the continuum time constant range.
6 Further, one type of bacterium produces stable single domain crystals which it stores internally. Another type produces random small sized single domains, including superparamagnetic
with relatively larger R frequency dependence (still very small in absolute terms), will exhibit an R permeability frequency spectrum that is noticeably temperature dependent too, for the reasons given above. Some rare extreme super-hot-rocks exhibit very signicant R frequency dependent permeabilities, and these are thus highly temperature dependent because the time constant spectrum is not loguniform. Such rocks exist in some areas in the Golan Heights in the Middle East, for example. Suppose a PI transmit coil system has an ideal transmit system, that is zero transmit system on resistance, and the whole back-emf duration is extremely short and any delays in the receiver transfer function are also extremely short. If the on period is T with a voltage V applied across the transmit coil, then for a single transmit on pulse followed by a back-emf pulse, the received voltage signal across the receive coil from magnetic soils is kV{ T/t - ln[(t+T)/t] }, where k is a function of coil distance from the ground and the local concentration of mineralised soils. This decaying signal is purely the R component which results from the history of the applied eld. The important issue is that the above soil response is predictable and, to a high degree of accuracy, soil invariant. Thus, by subtracting one part of the signal from another, it is possible to cancel the soil response. For a rst order metal target, that is a target with a non-distributed time constant, the target response is proportional to V{T/ - 1 + exp(-T/)}exp(-t/). This is different from the soil equation, so the subtraction of one part of the signal from another to cancel the soil response will, in general, not cancel the target signal. If for example, samples were taken at t=0.02T, to give a signal S1, and at 0.5T to give S2, and at T to give S3, then the value of S176.97S2+75.97S3 will cancel signals from the soil for this ideal PI system, and also cancel signals induced by static magnetic elds such as the earths eld.
Figure 9a. Comparison between a long, medium and short time constant target, and mineralised soil signal decay from a PI pulse.
Some texts present this graph as a log-log scale, so for comparison, this is given below.
Note that the soil signal is scale invariant in time, that is suppose T = 1 and t = 0.1. Then if kV = 1, the value of the signal at t=0.1 is 1/0.1 -ln(1.1/0.1) = 10-ln(11). Compare this to time scaled up by 2 times, that is T = 2 and t = 0.2, which is still the same, namely 2/0.2 -ln(2.2/0.2) = 10-ln(11). This is what one would expect from a log-uniform distribution of time constants. However, the target response is not scale invariant with time, that is for T=1, t=0.1, the response for say =0.05 is {1-0.05[1-exp(1/0.05)}exp(-0.1/0.05) = 0.14, whereas for T = 2, t=0.2, the response is {2-0.05[1-exp(-2/0.05)}exp(-0.2/0.05) = 0.037. This is because the target time constant is literally, as said, constant. {For readers interested in state-of-the-art mathematics, I have a paper published in the prestigious applied maths journal SIAM J. Appl. Math., Vol 66, No 2, pp. 468-488 2005, which discloses a solution using non-linear mathematical techniques to a problem which eluded engineers for many decades.} As stated above, the range of time constants of the magnetic particles is log-uniform over a certain range of values. This range sets an upper frequency limit for the accuracy of the relationships given in 2.5. For the same reason, the soil signal decay, shortly after the cessation of the transmit period where this high frequency soil behaviour is manifest, ceases to be predictable owing to random variation in soil magnetic particle time constant distributions from location to location. Hence, this sets a lower limit to the delay before receive measurements commence following the transmit signal in order that soil signals may be cancelled accurately. Thus this also sets a lower limit to the time constant and hence size of the nugget that may be detected whilst still rejecting soil signals accurately. However, there are other reasons why measuring too close to the transmit pulse is a problem. First, transient signals from the transmit and receive electronics may cause a problem. This can be reduced by careful electronic design, but there is always a limit. Second, conductive components of soil may cause interference. The intensity of these conductive soil components is dependent on coil size; large coils detect these far more overtly than small coils. In practice for inland non-salty soils, this becomes a problem for the PI units with similar gains and delays to Minelab PI units in many areas if the coil (mono-loop) is about a metre (3ft) or more in diameter. The effect is pronounced for a 4 diameter mono-loop. In salty soils, the effect is far greater because of increased soil electrical conductivity. This soil conductive response roughly follows a kt-5/2 law, which is a far more rapid decay than the T/t - ln[(t+T)/t] response. The term k in kt-5/2 is a function of the local soil conductivity and coil size. This dominates for very large coil loops, and for ore prospecting when loops of the order of 100 metres diameter are laid on the ground surface. As long as the receive loop is about a metre bigger or smaller than the transmit loop, that is spaced away from the transmit loop by >1 metre, then the soil magnetic signal becomes insignicant compared to conductive ore signals. This is because the ore signal is so much stronger, and because the soil magnetic materials are typically shallow, most effectively less than a metre.
The SD2000 detector was developed by deriving the above mathematical expressions, rst in 1987, then checking the validity of these with a simple electronic circuit. The reason for doing the maths resulted from a realisation that if the soil R signal was independent of frequency, then it must necessarily follow that the pulse induction soil signal must be of an invariant shape, and therefore capable of being cancelled. About a month later, a prototype was tested in the goldelds; it worked far better than a multi-frequency sine-wave prototype which had already been signicantly more successful at nding gold than any VLF detector. This was developed further into a robust prototype for further checking. A patent was then lled and thereafter several prototypes built and used to nd gold on a regular basis. These prototypes were upgraded a few times and tested by the so-called 12 Apostles. (The number 12 was a myth; there were fewer than 12 in reality.) All this work on this PI development was done purely by me after work hours during a very busy period, hence the relatively long delays. The improving prototypes resulted in the SD2000. In terms of discrimination, obviously all multi-frequency technologies have the ability to relatively accurately discriminate time constants without signicant X component soil interference. PI is no exception. The gure shows the response produced by subtracting one sample from another at the times indicated. The black curve, S1, is the response from the difference between a sample at t=0.02T from a sample at t=0.1T where t=0 at the end of the back-emf pulse. The yellow curve, S2, is the difference between a sample at t=0.05T from a sample at t=0.3T relative to the result S1. The red curve is the difference between a sample at t=0.2T from a sample at t=T relative to the result S2.
In the gure, s stands for sample at time xx after the transmit pulse. As can be seen, the ratio varies very substantially for different target time constants t which basically means well-dened differentiation between different targets. For reference, the gure below is for sine waves, and shows the relative response for 3 different frequencies, each separated by a factor of 4 to be consistent with Figure 10. This shows a similar degree of t differentiation but with the advantage of greater values of R at the target characteristic frequency extremes, thus yielding a greater advantage over PI for discrimination, as will other multi-frequency CW systems with a similar spread of effective transmit/receive frequencies, such as the Minelab multi-period rectangular-wave detectors (e.g. Sovereign/Explorer).
Figure 11. Relative R component response for 3 simultaneous sine-waves. Compare with gure 10.
2.8 Multi-voltage, multi-period PI; Dual Voltage (DVT) and Multi-Period Sensing (MPS).
The energy associated with the short ON pulses of the multi-ON-period system of 2.7 above are low compared to the long ON pulse, simply because the transmit current has a shorter time to build in value during the short pulses compared to the long pulse. Thus, by increasing the voltage applied to the transmit coil during the short pulses compared to the long pulse makes the associated energy more equal. This further helps differentiate between target signals and the soil viscosity decay signals, and again aids the Minelab PI detectors signicantly.
Figure 12. Multi-voltage, multi-period PI transmit spectrum. Note very broad spectrum.
All metal targets have distributed time constants: the only targets that have rst-order-like time constants are non-ferrous rings. Even coins do not approximate rst-order targets particularly well, and irregular shaped targets such as gold nuggets certainly do not. Hence, these behave like several different time constants mixed together. Some gold nuggets with fairly widely distributed time constants may produce signal decays that are similar to the soil decay signal, and hence these gold nuggets produce relatively weak responses because their signals are mostly cancelled just as the soil signal is cancelled. However, the vast majority of decay signals from nuggets are not similar in shape to the soil signal, so the nuggets are detected well.
Figure 13: BBS receive waveform of a long time-constant (e.g. large) ferrous target. The sampling of is shown when the ferrous response is strongest and least contaminated by eddy current diamagnetic components.
During a long pulse, a ferrous target eddy current signal in the receive coil decreases in magnitude (voltage). {Actually, the signal in the receive coil responds to how quickly the eddy currents change in strength, not their magnitude.} As stated in 2.3, eld X components, generated by eddy currents, oppose the ferrous X components of metal targets. The signal from these diamagnetic X components decreases with time during a pulse, whereas the ferrous X signal merely gets stronger as the transmitted magnetic eld enters the target during a pulse. Hence, the ferrous (+X) signal is relatively strongest, and diamagnetic (-X) is weakest at the end of long periods pulses. Thus measurements at the end of long period pulses give a relatively uncontaminated by signals from eddy currents, producing excellent information about the ferrous nature of metal targets. This does not eliminate the problem of soil X mineralisation signals, but because the ferrous signal is strong during these periods, the capability of ferrous discrimination is signicantly improved. This Iron Mask feature benets the Minelab Full Band Spectrum (FBS) and Broad Band Spectrum (BBS) technologies.