| Literature DB >> 29396502 |
Morten Sales1, Markus Strobl2,3, Takenao Shinohara4, Anton Tremsin5, Luise Theil Kuhn6, William R B Lionheart7, Naeem M Desai7, Anders Bjorholm Dahl8, Søren Schmidt9.
Abstract
Through the use of Time-of-Flight Three Dimensional Polarimetric Neutron Tomography (ToF 3DPNT) we have for the first time successfully demonstrated a technique capable of measuring and reconstructing three dimensional magnetic field strengths and directions unobtrusively and non-destructively with the potential to probe the interior of bulk samples which is not amenable otherwise. Using a pioneering polarimetric set-up for ToF neutron instrumentation in combination with a newly developed tailored reconstruction algorithm, the magnetic field generated by a current carrying solenoid has been measured and reconstructed, thereby providing the proof-of-principle of a technique able to reveal hitherto unobtainable information on the magnetic fields in the bulk of materials and devices, due to a high degree of penetration into many materials, including metals, and the sensitivity of neutron polarisation to magnetic fields. The technique puts the potential of the ToF time structure of pulsed neutron sources to full use in order to optimise the recorded information quality and reduce measurement time.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29396502 PMCID: PMC5797168 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20461-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Instrumental set-up. The neutrons are polarised in the y-direction by the polariser. The arrows of the subsequent spin manipulators indicate the direction of the magnetic field around which the neutron spin is turned in the device. The π spin flipper downstream from the polariser can be activated to select neutron polarisation directions of −y, and the two π/2 spin rotators further downstream can be used to rotate the neutron spins to the ±z- or ±x-directions. The sample is rotated around a vertical axis for different tomographic projections, and the two following π/2 spin rotators choose the direction of analysis before the analyser, which transmits neutrons with spins along y. Finally, the signal is recorded by a position and time sensitive detector.
Figure 2Procedure for reconstructing a 3D magnetic field measured with polarimetric neutron tomography. The measured intensities are reduced to 3 scalars that can be filtered back projected in order to obtain the reconstructed three dimensional magnetic field.
Figure 3Reconstruction results. (a) shows the structural reconstruction from the attenuation signal. (b–d) respectively shows the B, B, and B components of the reconstructed magnetic field for field strengths above the threshold indicated by the colorbars. (e–h) shows different slices through the reconstructed 3D magnetic field volume, with the slice location indicated by the gray planes in the above figures. Note that, as the solenoid was not oriented with its axis exactly along the x-axis, but rather at an ~9° angle in the xz-plane, a central signal can be seen along z for the B field in (h). (Supplementary animation).
Figure 4Comparison between simple calculated magnetic field strength inside solenoid, a more precise calculation using the Biot-Savart law, and the reconstructed magnetic field strength using polarimetric neutron tomography. The field strength shown, as a function of position along the solenoid axis, is for the central cylindric area around the solenoid axis. The mean of the field as well as the standard deviation within this area is shown for the Biot-Savart calculation as well as the reconstructed field averaged over the measured wavelength range. Curves for the reconstructed field using three single wavelengths are included as well.