A high pulsed magnetic field measurement system based on the use of CMR-B-scalar sensors was developed for the investigations of the electrodynamic processes in electromagnetic launchers. The system consists of four independent modules (channels) which are controlled by a personal computer. Each channel is equipped with a CMR-B-scalar sensor connected to the measurement device-B-scalar meter. The system is able to measure the magnitude of pulsed magnetic fields from 0.3 T to 20 T in the range from DC up to 20 kHz independently of the magnetic field direction. The measurement equipment circuit is electrically separated from the ground and shielded against low and high frequency electromagnetic noise. The B-scalar meters can be operated in the presence of ambient pulsed magnetic fields with amplitudes up to 0.2 T and frequencies higher than 1 kHz. The recorded signals can be transmitted to a personal computer in a distance of 25 m by means of a fiber optic link. The system was tested using the electromagnetic railgun RAFIRA installed at the French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis, France.
The results on the study of grain boundary effects and influence of film deposition conditions on the magnetoresistance and its anisotropy in polycrystalline La0.83Sr0.17MnO3 films are presented. The magnetoresistance was measured in high pulsed magnetic fields up to 25 T (pulse duration ≈ 0.6 ms) in the temperature range of 120-300 K. A modified Mott hopping model was applied to describe the main behavior of high-field magnetoresistance for both ferromagnetic and paramagnetic phases of the polycrystalline films by taking into account the demagnetization field of the films measured in low magnetic fields perpendicular to film plane. It was also found that to obtain the higher magnetoresistance saturation field at room temperature it is necessary to use the films with smaller crystallites (D ≈ 100 nm). Such films could be used for design of megagauss pulsed magnetic field sensors.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.