Broadband nuclear magnetic resonance using DC SQUID amplifiers

1999 
Abstract We have constructed two pulsed NMR spectrometers in which the signal is coupled to the input coil of a low T c DC SQUID using a superconducting flux transformer, yielding broadband response, with bandwidth determined by the SQUID electronics. A 50 kHz bandwidth commercial system has been used to observe free induction decay signals from platinum powder, bulk platinum, 3 He gas and surface monolayers of 3 He in the temperature range from 1.4 to 4.2 K and at frequencies from 5 to 40 kHz. The observed signal-to-noise ratio is as calculated with the noise dominated by flux noise in the SQUID in all samples but the bulk metal. A second system, which operates in flux-locked loop mode with bandwidth of 3.4 MHz using a SQUID with additional positive feedback, has been used to observe NMR signals from platinum powder at frequencies from 38 to 513 kHz and at a temperature of 4.2 K. The advantage of this technique in the study of systems with short T 2 at frequencies below 1 MHz is discussed. In addition we discuss the benefits of both broadband and tuned input circuits for NMR detection and we describe the performance of a spectrometer with a tuned input circuit which has been used to obtain signals at 1 MHz from platinum powder at 4.2 K and from ∼2 layers of 3 He absorbed on a surface area of 0.11 m 2 at 1.7 K. The amplifier noise temperature is predicted to be 60 mK in the 3 He experiment. This demonstrates the potential of the tuned set-up for measurements at low millikelvin temperatures on systems with low spin density and with T 2 greater than several hundred microseconds.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    16
    References
    13
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []