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Note: Remember, carbon foils are extremely delicate. Handle carefully in every step, the foils tear easily.
Prewarm the oven to 200 C. Check the temperature with a thermometer –there is a digital one in the Detector Lab that can be borrowed, ask John Yurkon. Place the slide on the grate, with the carbon foil facing up. The slide has a sticker on the other side. Allow the foil to bake for 30 minutes, or more.
Figure 1. Oven used in June 2010, belonging to Betty. Picture2 001.jpg
Figure 2. Close up of carbon foils on grate, foil side up. Picture2 002.jpg
When done, turn off the oven and open the door to allow the foils to cool. Slides will be hot! Do not move them until they have cooled. There may be some discoloration or textural changes after baking – this is normal.
The edges of the carbon are the points most likely to crack, and harder to float. We need to trim the edges with a scalpel, or other precise blade. Hold the plate firmly in one hand while cutting it. Apply pressure to break through the carbon foil cleanly to the glass slide. Cut in a straight line; zigs are likely to tear. It is easiest to cut in a smooth motion. Trim off as narrow a strip as possible, leaving plenty of room to cover the oval aperture and enough room on one of the short sides to be held by the clamp.
Figure 3. Cut foil with scalpel. Picture2 006.jpg
Figure 4. Carbon foil after cutting. Lines can be seen close to the edges of the foil. Picture2 005.jpg
Before we can float the foil, we need to setup the following:
Figure 5. Ringstand with clamp held over the tub of DI water Picture 354.jpg
Center the tub of DI water on the lab jack at lowest height. Secure the slide in the clamp without covering the cut line. Adjust the pitch of the slide so the leading edge is parallel to the surface of the water. Adjust the height so the slide is about an inch over the surface of the water, this should be enough room to make adjustments and not splash the carbon foil. Check that the clamp extends far enough over the edge of the tub that the foil can be fully lowered into the water.
Keep extra deionized water at hand to raise the water level if needed.
Raise the lab jack slowly to bring the water level up to meet the bottom of the slide. When the two first meet, stop and proceed extremely slowly.
Figure 6. Raise the lab jack slowly. Our tub was too heavy and required two people for the initial lifting. Picture 355 b.jpg
Adjust the jack so the water just barely spills over the lip onto the slide. Allow the water to creep across the slide. Do not touch the jack before the water stops moving. You may need to raise the jack slightly to allow the water to get all the way across the edge of the slide. Floating this leading edge is the most critical step. Do not rush the process.
The trimmed edge will float up first, and may break off into pieces. The front edge of the carbon will lift next, check to see that it is floating on the surface before proceeding.
Continue to raise the lab jack slowly, pausing to allow the water to seep between the foil and the frame. Small wrinkles will appear as the water branches out. Watch the long edges of the carbon foil for tears as you progress up the slide. Continue to raise the lab jack until the carbon foil detaches from the slide. A successful float will look like Figure 7.
Troubleshooting:
Figure 7. The whole carbon foil is floating on the surface of the water, but has not yet detached from the top of the slide. Picture 356.jpg
When the foil detaches from the slide, blow gently onto the surface of the water to push the carbon away from the slide. Do not blow directly onto the foil, it may break.
The slide is difficult to see in the water. When possible, move the clamp and empty slide to the side of the tub, or remove them. Be careful not to drop water onto or near the foil when removing the slide.
First practice moving the MCP frame in the water away from the carbon foil. Hold the frame by the corner with the tweezers, with the Aluminized side towards yourself, the side where the carbon will be deposited. Lift the frame straight up in the water, slowly—you should see a thin film of water across the oval aperture. This is good practice for lifiting the carbon foil. We want to balance the surface tension on the Carbon so it will not break.
Figure 8. Practice raising the frame in the water. Picture 358.jpg
Figure 9. Approach the carbon foil with the frame fully submerged. Align the edge of the foil with the top of the frame. Picture 359.jpg
When ready to lift the carbon, position the submerged frame underneath the carbon foil, so the short edge of the carbon foil lines up with the top edge of the frame. Raise the frame to just underneath the carbon. You want to catch the short edge of the carbon on the lip of the frame, this provides an anchor for the foil. The two edges should be parallel, and the carbon centered on the frame.
Slowly and evenly, raise the frame and allow the carbon to drape over the aperture. Try not to make any sudden starts or stops in the raising motion. The carbon needs to cover the aperture entirely. If it does not, lower the foil back into water the same way (vertically, smoothly, by slow increments) and try again.
Carefully dry the edges of the frame with a Kimwipe. Do not apply pressure to the carbon foil or the mylar. Set inside a frame container upright, and allow to dry in air completely before using. Mark the frame with the carbon foil thickness when dry.
Figure 10. Completed frame. Dry edges with Kimwipe. Picture 360.jpg