1 / 35

From quantum mechanics to auto-mechanics

Frontiers in Spectroscopy. Ohio State University, March 2004. Nonlinear Spectroscopy:. From quantum mechanics to auto-mechanics. Lecture Outline. Lecture 1: Linear and Nonlinear Optics Nonlinear spectroscopic techniques Lasers for nonlinear spectroscopy

lew
Download Presentation

From quantum mechanics to auto-mechanics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Frontiers in Spectroscopy. Ohio State University, March 2004 Nonlinear Spectroscopy: From quantum mechanics to auto-mechanics Paul Ewart

  2. Lecture Outline • Lecture 1: Linear and Nonlinear Optics Nonlinear spectroscopic techniques Lasers for nonlinear spectroscopy • Lecture 2: Basic theory of wave mixing Coherent signal generation Spectral simulation • Lecture 3: Spectroscopy and diagnostics High resolution spectroscopy Combustion diagnostics

  3. Combustion Diagnostics • Measurement required of: • Flows (including 2 phases): Velocity, particle size etc. • Thermodynamic parameters: Temperature, Pressure, Density etc • Chemical properties: major and minor species, reaction rates etc • Measurement challenges: • High temperature and pressure • Steep temperature and density gradients • Non-invasive probes • Scattering and luminous environments • Restricted optical access • Low concentrations of key species – ppm. • Space and time resolution • etc. ! Nonlinear Solution: Laser Spectroscopic Techniques ^

  4. Nonlinear spectroscopy • Coherent signal generation • Time and space resolution • Sensitive to trace quantities • High signal-to-noise ratio • Doppler-free spectral response • Species and state selective • Microscopic (molecular) and Macroscopic parameter measurements

  5. Four Wave Mixing techniques

  6. CARS Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering

  7. Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering, CARS: Narrowband

  8. Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering, CARS: Broadband or Multiplex Time resolved spectra and temperatures

  9. DFWM Degenerate Four Wave Mixing

  10. DFWM in oxy-acetylene flame

  11. DFWM in flames: OH spectra

  12. Doppler-free DFWM spectra of OH in methane/air flame

  13. Boltzman plot for temperature determination

  14. Multiplex DFWM spectroscopy in flames 1 3 2 • Broad laser spectrum overlaps • molecular resonances • 2. Broadband FWM spectrum • recorded on CCD camera • 3. Theoretical spectrum fitted to • find temperature. • C2 spectrum in oxy-acetylene flame

  15. Broadband DFWM Spectroscopy of C2 in oxy-acetylene flame

  16. LITGS: Laser Induced Thermal Gratings

  17. Density Perturbation in LITGS • Acoustic gratings interfering… • Speed of sound Temperature (2) Temperature grating… Decay by diffusion Pressure

  18. LITGS Laser induced Thermal Grating Spectroscopy of OH in high pressure flame • 5 nsec pulses at 308 nm • excite Thermal Grating in OH • cw Argon ion laser at 488 nm • probes Thermal Grating • Scattered LITGS signal records dynamics of grating up to 40 bar • Signal intensity limited by intensity of cw probe laser 1 Watt

  19. LITGS in OH in high pressure CH4/air flame

  20. Lasers for Nonlinear Spectroscopy Multiplex Spectroscopy • Broad, variable bandwidth • Frequency tunable • No mode structure High Resolution Spectroscopy • High power – pulsed • Narrow linewidth – Single longitudinal mode, SLM • Wide SLM tuneability ~nm • UV, visible and IR wavelengths

  21. Fluctuation in relative intensity or phase of modes leads to fluctuation • In relative intensity of scattered molecular spectrum i.e. noise • Noise limits precision of fitting theoretical to experimental spectrum

  22. Lasers and mode structure • Conventional lasers impose mode structure by standing wave resonator • Modeless laser uses travelling wave with no resonant cavity – hence no modes • Noise limited only by quantum fluctuations

  23. Temperature measurement in firing si engine using broadband CARS with modeless laser • Pump laser: Frequency doubled • single mode Nd:YAG • Stokes laser: Modeless laser • Low noise gives precise fit to • theoretical CARS spectrum – • precision of 3 – 5% resolves • cycle-by-cycle variations

  24. Multiplex CARS Spectroscopy of H2 in CVD Plasma using Modeless Laser Plasma off. Room Temperature, 300 K. Single-shot spectrum

  25. Multiplex CARS Spectroscopy of H2 in CVD Plasmausing Modeless Laser Plasma on. Temperature, 2340 K. Single-shot spectrum S.D. ~ 7%

  26. Candidate laser systems for high resolution nonlinear spectroscopy • Pulse amplified cw dye lasers • Pulsed Optical Parametric Oscillators • Diode seeded Alexandrite lasers • Diode seeded Modeless lasers

  27. The Diode-Seeded Modeless Laser • No cavity mode matching required: robust and stable seeding. • Linewidth of diode laser (< 2MHz): output is transform limited. • Tuning determined by SLM diode laser: tuning range ~ 10nm. • Dye selected to suit diode output: 630 - 850 nm. • SIMPLE • NARROWBAND • WIDE TUNEABILITY • MODULAR DESIGN

  28. High power DSML system

  29. Experimental Area SLM Nd:YAG Pump Laser Seeded Modeless Laser

  30. Spectrum of STL output Fabry-Perot interferogram Bandwidth of output: 165 MHz

  31. The Diode-Seeded Modeless Laser, DSML • High power – pulsed • Narrow linewidth – Single longitudinal mode SLM • Wide SLM tunability • UV, visible and IR wavelengths 30 mJ, 5 ns pulse: 6MW SLM linewidth: 165 MHz, 0.006 cm-1 10 nm SLM tuning range 315 – 425 nm, 635 ± 5 nm (650 / 670 / 690 etc) 2.4 – 4.2 mm by DFG

  32. High Resolution DFWM Spectroscopy In a low pressure flame Pressure broadening Power broadening OH A-X (0,0) system

  33. DFWM:Experimental Layout

  34. Low-Pressure Burner

  35. DFWM Pressure Broadening in OH methane/oxygen flame

More Related