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Crossed threads

Make one of the lowest mass sample platforms by threading a cross of white cotton thread (colored dyes can be magnetic). Using a needle made of a nonmagnetic metal, or at least carefully cleaned, thread some white cotton sewing thread through the tube walls and tie a secure knot so that the thread platform is rigid. Glue a sample to this platform or use the platform as a support for a sample in a container. Use an additional thread cross on top to hold the container in place.

Gelatin capsule

Gelatin capsules can be very useful for containing and mounting samples. Many aspects of using gelatin capsules have been mentioned in the section, Containing the Sample. It is best if the sample is mounted near the capsule’s center, or if it completely fills the capsule. Use extra capsule parts to produce mirror symmetry. The thread cross is an excellent way of holding a capsule in place.

Thread mounting

Another method of sample mounting is attaching the sample to a thread that runs through the sample tube. The thread can be attached to the sample holder at the ends of the sample tube with tape, for example. This method can be very useful with flat samples, such as those on substrates, particularly when the field is in the plane of the film. Be sure to close the sample tube with caps.

  • Mounting with a disc platform.
  • Mounting on crossed threads.
  • Long thread mounting.

Steps for inserting the sample

  1. Cut off a small section of a clear plastic drinking straw. The section must be small enough to fit inside the straw.
  2. Weigh and measure the sample.
  3. Use plastic tweezers to place the sample inside the small straw segment. It is important to use plastic tweezers not metallic ones as these will contaminate the sample.
  4. Place the small straw segment inside the larger one. It should be approximately in the middle of the large drinking straw.
  5. Attach the straw to the sample rod which is used to insert the sample into the SQUID machine.
  6. Insert the sample rod with the attached straw into the vertical insertion hole on top of the SQUID.

Centre the sample

The sample must be centered in the SQUID pickup coils to ensure that all coils sense the magnetic moment of the sample. If the sample is not centered, the coils read only part of the magnetic moment.

During a centering measurement the MPMS scans the entire length of the samples vertical travel path, and the MPMS reads the maximum number of data points. During centering there are a number of terms which need to be understood.

  1. A scan length is the length of a scan of a particular sample which should usually try and be the maximum of the sample.
  2. A sample is centered when it is in the middle of a scan length. The data points are individual voltage readings plotting response curves in centering scan data files.
  3. Autotracking is the adjustment of a sample position to keep a sample centered in SQUID coils. Autotracking compensates for thermal expansion and contraction in a sample rod.

As soon as a centering measurement is initiated, the sample transport moves upward, carrying the sample through the pickup coils. While the sample moves through the coils, the MPMS measures the SQUID’s response to the magnetic moment of the sample and saves all the data from the centering measurement.

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Source:  OpenStax, Nanomaterials and nanotechnology. OpenStax CNX. May 07, 2014 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col10700/1.13
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