ACMS
ACMS
ACMS
Introduction to:
AC Susceptibility
AC Magnetic Measurements
Dinesh Martien
Introduction
AC magnetic measurements, in which an AC field is applied
to a sample and the resulting AC moment is measured, are an
important tool for characterizing many materials. Because the
induced sample moment is time-dependent, AC measurements
yield information about magnetization dynamics which are not
obtained in DC measurements, where the sample moment is
constant during the measurement time. This application note
will briefly describe how AC magnetic measurements are
performed, discuss the meaning of the data that come out of
an AC measurement, and show some measurement examples.
DC Magnetometry
DC magnetic measurements determine the equilibrium value
of the magnetization in a sample. The sample is magnetized
by a constant magnetic field and the magnetic moment of the
sample is measured, producing a DC magnetization curve
M(H) . The moment is measured by force, torque or induction techniques, the last being the most common in modern
instruments. Inductive measurements are performed by
moving the sample relative to a set of pickup coils, either by
vibration or one-shot extraction. In conventional inductive
magnetometers, one measures the voltage induced by the
moving magnetic moment of the sample in a set of copper
pickup coils. A much more sensitive technique uses a set of
superconducting pickup coils and a SQUID to measure the
current induced in superconducting pickup coils, yielding
high sensitivity that is independent of sample speed during
extraction. Inductive magnetometers can also be used to
perform AC magnetic measurements.
AC Magnetometry
In AC magnetic measurements, a small AC drive magnetic field
is superimposed on the DC field, causing a time-dependent
moment in the sample. The field of the time-dependent
moment induces a current in the pickup coils, allowing measurement without sample motion. The detection circuitry is
configured to detect only in a narrow frequency band, normally
at the fundamental frequency (that of the AC drive field).
In order to understand what is measured in AC magnetometry,
first consider very low frequencies, where the measurement is
most similar to DC magnetometry. In this case, the magnetic
moment of the sample follows the M (H) curve that would be
measured in a DC experiment. As long as the AC field is small,
the induced AC moment is MAC = (dM/dH) . HAC sin(t)
where HAC is the amplitude of the driving field, is the
driving frequency, and = dM /dH is the slope of the M(H)
curve, called the susceptibility. The susceptibility is the quantity of interest in AC magnetometry.
As the DC applied magnetic field is changed, different parts of
the M (H ) curve are accessed, giving a different susceptibility.
One advantage of the AC measurement is already evident: the
measurement is very sensitive to small changes in M(H ) .
Since the AC measurement is sensitive to the slope of M(H )
and not to the absolute value, small magnetic shifts can be
detected even when the absolute moment is large.
= ' 2 + " 2
= arctan( " / ' )
0.3
' = cos
" = sin
0.2
Measurement Examples
SPIN-GLASS.
Spin-glass behavior is usually characterized by AC susceptibility.
In a spin-glass, magnetic spins experience random interactions
with other magnetic spins, resulting in a state that is highly
irreversible and metastable. This spin-glass state is realized
below the freezing temperature, and the system is paramagnetic
above this temperature. The most studied spin-glass systems
are dilute alloys of paramagnets or ferromagnets in nonmagnetic metals, typified by Cu1-xMnx.
The freezing temperature is determined by measuring ' vs.
temperature, a curve which reveals a cusp at the freezing temperature. The AC susceptibility measurement is particularly
1% 'Max
0.330
0.325
0.1
0.335
0.320
9.00
Tf
0.0
0
9.50
10.00
Temperature (K)
50
Temperature (K)
100
150
QuantumDesign
In the Nel-Brown theory, the particles are assumed to be noninteracting and the blocking temperature is given by
TB =
E
,
ln( /0 )kB
1.0
'/'(TB )
0.8
0.6
0.4
D
C
S
0.2
0
10
20
()
30
40
50
The scaling behaviors of ' and " provide additional information about particle interactions and the distribution of particle
sizes. For noninteracting particles, ' vs. T curves for various
particle concentrations are identical when properly normalized.
Deviation from this behavior indicates that interparticle interactions are important. As shown in Fig. 2, Luis, et al. applied
this method to ferritin particles and found no evidence for
interactions.8 The same experimenters plotted " vs. a scaling
variable that depends on the measurement frequency to find
that the particle sizes follow a gamma-function distribution.
MAGNETIC PHASE TRANSITIONS.
The dynamic susceptibility is also a powerful tool for examining the nature of magnetic phase transitions, such as ferromagnetic transitions. Typically, diverges at the critical temperature of a ferromagnetic phase transition. Critical exponents
characterize the nature of the divergence as a function of
temperature and DC applied field. Determination of these
critical exponents allows one to distinguish between various
models of magnetic interactions, such as the 3-d Heisenberg,
X-Y, or Ising model. For example, Berndt, et al., characterized
two phase transitions in amorphous (Fe1-xMnx)75P16B6Al3 and
found exponents consistent with the Heisenberg model for the
higher temperature transition.9
SUPERCONDUCTIVITY.
AC susceptibility is the standard tool for determining the
physics of superconductors, in particular for measuring critical
temperature. In the normal state (above the critical temperature), superconductors typically have a small susceptibility.
In the fully superconducting state, the sample is a perfect diamagnet and so ' = 1. Typically, the onset of a significant
nonzero ' is taken as the superconducting transition temperature. An example is the long-awaited detection of superconductivity in platinum, which was found to have a critical
temperature in the 1 mK range for compacted powders.10 An
example of AC susceptibility of the high-temperature superconductor LaBaCa(Cu1-xZnx)O7- . is shown in Fig. 3.11
The out-of-phase component of the susceptibility is nonzero
for temperatures slightly below the transition temperature,
where magnetic irreversibility occurs in the sample. Measurement of " allows determination of the critical current, the
maximum current a superconductor can carry before becoming
electrically resistive. By finding the temperature at which "
is maximum for various AC drive field amplitudes, one can
determine the critical current vs. temperature.12
" (S UNITS)
References
3 2 1
0.2
4
0.16
0.12
0.08 6
1 - PURE
2 - 1.0%Zn
3 - 1.5%Zn
4 - 2.0%Zn
5 - 2.5%Zn
6 - 3.0%Zn
0.04
0
' (S UNITS)
-0.32
3 2 1
-0.64
-0.96
-1.28
0
20
40
60
80
100
TEMPERATURE (K)
Conclusion
The above examples give a brief introduction to the wide
applicability of AC magnetic measurement. Many important
material properties require characterization by this technique.
Interesting and exciting materials are well characterized by the
combination of AC magnetic measurements and other
techniques, such as DC magnetization.
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