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Thermally stable Peltier controlled vacuum chamber for electrical transport measurements

Poole, S. F.; Amin, O. J.; Solomon, A.; Barton, L. X.; Campion, R. P.; Edmonds, K. W.; Wadley, P.

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Authors

S. F. Poole

OLIVER AMIN Oliver.Amin@nottingham.ac.uk
Senior Research Fellow

A. Solomon

L. X. Barton

KEVIN EDMONDS kevin.edmonds@nottingham.ac.uk
Associate Professor & Reader in Physics

PETER WADLEY PETER.WADLEY@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Assistant Professor in Experimental Condensed Matter Physics



Abstract

The design, manufacture, and characterization of an inexpensive, temperature-controlled vacuum chamber with millikelvin stability for electrical transport measurements at and near room temperature is reported. A commercially available Peltier device and a high-precision temperature controller are used to actively heat and cool the sample space. The system was designed to minimize thermal fluctuations in spintronic and semiconductor transport measurements, but the general principle is relevant to a wide range of electrical measurement applications. The main issues overcome are the mounting of a sample with a path of high thermal conductivity through to the Peltier device and the heat sinking of the said Peltier device inside a vacuum. A copper slug is used as the mount for a sample, and a large copper block is used as a thermal feedthrough before a passive heat sink is used to cool this block. The Peltier device provides 20 W of heating and cooling power, achieving a maximum range of 30 K below and 40 K above the ambient temperature. The temperature stability is within 5 mK at all set points with an even better performance above the ambient temperature. A vacuum pressure of 10 −8 hPa is achievable. As a demonstration, we present experimental results from current-induced electrical switching of a CuMnAs thin film. Transport measurements with and without the Peltier control emphasize the importance of a constant temperature in these applications. The thermal lag between the sample space measurement and the sample itself is observed through magnetoresistance values measured during a temperature sweep.

Citation

Poole, S. F., Amin, O. J., Solomon, A., Barton, L. X., Campion, R. P., Edmonds, K. W., & Wadley, P. (2024). Thermally stable Peltier controlled vacuum chamber for electrical transport measurements. Review of Scientific Instruments, 95(3), Article 035108. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0186155

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 13, 2024
Online Publication Date Mar 6, 2024
Publication Date Mar 1, 2024
Deposit Date Mar 8, 2024
Publicly Available Date Mar 8, 2024
Journal Review of Scientific Instruments
Print ISSN 0034-6748
Electronic ISSN 1089-7623
Publisher American Institute of Physics
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 95
Issue 3
Article Number 035108
DOI https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0186155
Keywords Magnetic ordering, Transport properties, Electric measurements, Thermal instruments, Vacuum systems, Computer aided design, Thermal fluctuations, Materials properties
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/32176528

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