Close

It finally works!

A project log for PyPPM: A Proton Precession Magnetometer for all!

A device for conducting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance experiments at Earth's field

bradley-worleyBradley Worley 06/09/2014 at 01:242 Comments

The very first signal

After several years of failure with this project, I finally acquired a signal! The first hint at a signal came from averaging 128 scans (almost an hour of data collection!) down in the basement of the University of Nebraska chemistry building:

Blue shows the acquired signal without polarizing, and green is with polarizing.

The hump at 1775 Hz corresponds to a field strength of 41 microTesla, which was verified by my phones MEMS magnetometer. The peak is so broad because of massive field inhomogeneity caused by nearby iron structures that distort magnetic field lines. The sharper signals that appear in both spectra are (mostly) harmonics of the 60 Hz mains frequency.

While this was promising, it was nowhere near the expected performance of the PyPPM. So, I had to test it further...


Confirmation that the PyPPM works

A few weeks ago, I took the PyPPM out to a small field that was about 50 meters away from roads, electrical wires or buildings. After 32 scans, the resulting signal was (a) beautiful and (b) unequivocal proof that the PyPPM works! :)

The field here is roughly 54 microTesla, and even out in the field, I could still pick up sources of interference! The next step is definitely to design a humbucking sensor coil...

Discussions

Michael O'Brien wrote 06/09/2014 at 01:58 point
Congrats on the test results. That's clean, even though averaged.

  Are you sure? yes | no

Bradley Worley wrote 06/19/2014 at 13:25 point
Thanks! I'm planning improvements to the hardware (see the latest project logs) that should make the resulting signal even cleaner.

  Are you sure? yes | no