Press release
PRESS RELEASE 26 September 2007 CI MICROBALANCE HEAD SELECTED FOR UPGRADE OF FARADAY BALANCE SUSCEPTOMETER IN RUDJER BOSKOVIC INSTITUTE, ZAGREB![]() Dr Berislav Peric Scientists at the Rudjer Boskovic Institute in Zagreb, Croatia, have purchased a microbalance head, control unit, software and accessories from CI Electronics to upgrade a Faraday balance susceptometer used to investigate the magnetic susceptibility of various materials. Compared with alternatives, the CI microbalance head was less expensive, yet it still met the required specification for sensitivity and operation in a vacuum, plus CI Electronics was able to supply only the components and accessories required to enable the scientists to retrofit them to the existing apparatus. The Complex Compounds Laboratory within the Division of Materials Chemistry at the Rudjer Boskovic Institute has a Faraday balance susceptometer that was designed and constructed in-house a number of years ago. However, the scientists wanted to improve the performance of the apparatus and the existing microbalance head was not straightforward to integrate with modern PC-based control systems. The supplier was unable to provide the level of technical support required, so Dr Berislav Peric, an Associate in the laboratory, turned to CI Electronics. Following a series of email exchanges, Dr Peric ordered an Mk2-M5 balance head with an aluminium enclosure, 5g capacity and 0.1ug resolution. To complement this, a DISBAL control unit was ordered, together with CI's LabWeigh for Windows software, a silica flask and various accessories. All of this has now been incorporated within the Faraday balance susceptometer. Dr Peric comments:
Faraday balance susceptometers work on the principle that applying a vertical magnetic field gradient to a sample adds to or subtracts from its weight. By using a microbalance to quantify the magnetic force, the material's magnetic susceptibility can be calculated. In the apparatus at the Rudjer Boskovic Institute, the sample hangs approximately 1m below the microbalance head on a quartz rod and is surrounded by low-temperature, low-pressure helium that transfers heat between the sample and the cryostat. Readings are obtained from the microbalance head without the magnetic field applied; then, after one second, the magnetic field is applied and the sample weight is measured again for one second. Although the upgraded cryostat has not yet been installed to control the sample temperature, the apparatus has been tested at room temperature and the microbalance head is performing as required. An important aspect of the susceptometer upgrade was the ability to run experiments automatically under PC control.
The alternative to upgrading the susceptometer was to purchase new specialist equipment such as a SQUID (superconducting quantum interference devices) magnetometer. Although this would offer very high sensitivity, the cost would have been far greater.
Contact CI Electronics to request more information about microbalance heads by telephoning +44 (0)1722 424100, faxing +44 (0)1722 323222, emailing sales@cielec.com or look at www.cielec.com. © Copyright CI Electronics Ltd 2007. |