We have developed a new calorimeter for measuring thermodynamic properties in pulsed magnetic fields. An instrumental design is described along with the construction details including the sensitivity of a RuO2 thermometer. The operation of the calorimeter is demonstrated by measuring heat capacity of three samples, pure Germanium, CeCu2Ge2, and $\kappa$-(BEDT-TTF)2Cu[N(CN)2]Br, in pulsed fields up to 43.5 T. We have found that realization of field-stability is a key for measuring high-resolution heat capacity under pulsed fields. We have also tested the performance of the calorimeter by employing two measurement techniques; the quasi-adiabatic and dual-slope methods. We demonstrate that the calorimeter developed in this study is capable of performing high-resolution calorimetry in pulsed magnetic fields, which opens new opportunities for high-field thermodynamic studies.
Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures