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Magneto-Mechanical Coupling under Rotational Magnetization: From Multi-Scale Modeling to Non-Destructive Stress Evaluation in Ferromagnetic Steels

ABG-138678 Thesis topic
2026-04-23 Partial or full private funding (CIFRE agreement, foundation, association)
INSA Lyon
- Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes - France
Magneto-Mechanical Coupling under Rotational Magnetization: From Multi-Scale Modeling to Non-Destructive Stress Evaluation in Ferromagnetic Steels
  • Engineering sciences

Topic description

Residual and applied stresses strongly influence the magnetic behavior of ferromagnetic steels through magnetoelastic coupling. Classical magnetic techniques (e.g., Barkhausen noise, incremental permeability) under unidirectional configurations provide indirect stress indicators but are limited by anisotropy and irreversible domain-wall mechanisms [1].

Recent advances, such as Magnetic Rotational Permeability (MRP [2]), reveal that rotational magnetization enables access to alternative magnetization processes (notably 90° domain wall motion, coherent rotation), offering new routes for stress-sensitive magnetic signatures.
However, the quantitative link between the measured electrical response (induced voltage, complex impedance) and the mechanical stress state remains only partially understood. Bridging this gap requires a combination of accurate constitutive equations (for instance based on multi-scale magneto-mechanical approaches), advanced simulation (for instance based on the finite element method), multiphysical characterization of materials and precision instrumentation.

The objectives of the PhD project are :

_ Exploit a multi-scale model for magneto-mechanical coupling in steels under rotational magnetization conditions, linking local stress to domain-scale magnetic energy and macroscopic magnetic permeability.

_ Implement the coupled constitutive equations using GetDP [3] or COMSOL Multiphysics to simulate the rotational magnetization under stress.

_ Develop and optimize rotational magnetization-based eddy-current instrumentation capable of detecting small stress-induced magnetic variations in the near-surface region.

_ Design coils and excitation protocols optimized for surface stress sensitivity (by controlling field amplitude, frequency, and penetration depth).

_ Implement MRP measurements under controlled stress (uniaxial and residual).

_ Validate the model with experimental MRP data.

_ Identify and calibrate magnetic indicators correlating with residual stress.

_ Establish a quantitative correlation between electrical signatures (complex voltage, permeability tensor) and mechanical stress distribution in the top layer of steels.

_ Propose non-destructive testing procedure for stress quantification using rotational magnetization.

 

International Framework

Institution

Role

Supervisor

Focus

INSA Lyon (LGEF)

Main host

Assoc. Prof. Benjamin Ducharne

Instrumentation, magnetic NDT, experimental validation

Tohoku University (IFS)

1-year stay

Prof. Tetsuya Uchimoto

Magneto-mechanical experiments, rotational magnetization setup

CentraleSupélec / Université Paris-Saclay (GeePs)

Short stay (3–4 months)

Prof. Laurent Daniel

Multi-scale magneto-mechanical modeling

CETIM

Visits

Dr. Eric Wasniewski

Industrial applications

 

Expected Outcomes

A validated magneto-mechanical model predicting magnetic rotational permeability under stress.

A quantitative NDT protocol for surface residual stress evaluation.

A new generation of MRP-based sensors with enhanced sensitivity to magnetoelastic effects.

Starting date

2026-09-01

Funding category

Partial or full private funding (CIFRE agreement, foundation, association)

Funding further details

Presentation of host institution and host laboratory

INSA Lyon

Double degree diploma INSA - Lyon (France) / Tohohu University (Japan)

The PhD candidate will spend at least 1 year in Japan and 1 year in France.

PhD title

Electrical engineering

Country where you obtained your PhD

France

Candidate's profile

_ Electrical engineering

_ Material science

 

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