Abstract

The use of melting or freezing temperatures of high-purity substances as thermometric fixed points requires a knowledge of the binary phase diagrams of these substances and remaining impurities at very small impurity concentrations. In this paper, a calorimetric apparatus for the measurement of the change in liquidus temperature of fixed-point metals due to dissolved impurities at quasi-adiabatic conditions is presented. This approach combines advantages of the fixed-point method and adiabatic calorimetry. It is more efficient for the screening of a range of impurity concentrations than a fixed-point cell, requires less constructional and experimental expenditure compared with an adiabatic calorimeter, but provides similar small uncertainties on the millikelvin level. Measurements were carried out to determine the influence of lead on the melting temperature of indium at mass fractions up to 6.93 %. The results are in very good agreement with previous measurements by means of slim fixed-point cells in the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt and confirm a minimum of the freezing point of \(-\)178 mK at a mass fraction of about 3.7 %. It was demonstrated that this setup allows the investigation of binary phase diagrams with uncertainties less than 8 mK.

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