Miniature ceramic-anvil high-pressure cell for magnetic measurements in a commercial superconducting quantum interference device magnetometer
Naoyuki Tateiwa, Yoshinori Haga, Zachary Fisk, Yoshichika Onuki

TL;DR
This paper introduces a compact, cost-effective ceramic-anvil high-pressure cell compatible with SQUID magnetometers, capable of generating pressures above 5 GPa and suitable for various magnetic materials.
Contribution
The development of a miniature, ceramic-anvil high-pressure cell that is easy to use, inexpensive, and capable of high-pressure generation for magnetic measurements in SQUID magnetometers.
Findings
Maximum pressure of 7.6 GPa with 0.6 mm culet anvils.
Background magnetization significantly lower than Ni-Cr-Al gasket.
Successful measurements on MgB$_2$ and CePd$_5$Al$_2$.
Abstract
A miniature opposed-anvil high-pressure cell has been developed for magnetic measurement in a commercial superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometer. Non-magnetic anvils made of composite ceramic material were used to generate high-pressure with a Cu-Be gasket. We have examined anvils with different culet sizes (1.8, 1.6, 1.4, 1.2, 1.0, 0.8 and 0.6 mm). The pressure generated at low temperature was determined by the pressure dependence of the superconducting transition of lead (Pb). The maximum pressure depends on the culet size of the anvil: the values of are 2.4 and 7.6 GPa for 1.8 and 0.6 mm culet anvils, respectively. We revealed that the composite ceramic anvil has potential to generate high pressure above 5 GPa. The background magnetization of the Cu-Be gasket is generally two orders of magnitude smaller than the Ni-Cr-Al gasket for the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
