Characterizing complex mineral structures in thin sections of geological samples with a scanning hall effect microscope

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Abstract

We improved a magnetic scanning microscope for measuring the magnetic properties of minerals in thin sections of geological samples at submillimeter scales. The microscope is comprised of a 200 µm diameter Hall sensor that is located at a distance of 142 µm from the sample; an electromagnet capable of applying up to 500 mT DC magnetic fields to the sample over a 40 mm diameter region; a second Hall sensor arranged in a gradiometric configuration to cancel the background signal applied by the electromagnet and reduce the overall noise in the system; a custom-designed electronics system to bias the sensors and allow adjustments to the background signal cancelation; and a scanning XY stage with micrometer resolution. Our system achieves a spatial resolution of 200 µm with a noise at 6.0 Hz of 300 nTrms/(Hz)1/2 in an unshielded environment. The magnetic moment sensitivity is 1.3 × 10−11 Am2. We successfully measured the representative magnetization of a geological sample using an alternative model that takes the sample geometry into account and identified different micrometric characteristics in the sample slice.

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Araujo, J. F. D. F., Reis, A. L. A., Oliveira, V. C., Santos, A. F., Luz-Lima, C., Yokoyama, E., … Bruno, A. C. (2019). Characterizing complex mineral structures in thin sections of geological samples with a scanning hall effect microscope. Sensors (Switzerland), 19(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/s19071636

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