1.Stable radiation source 2.Wavelength selector 3.Transparent sample holder: cells/curvettes made of suitable material (Table 7- 2) 4.Radiation detector.

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Presentation transcript:

1.Stable radiation source 2.Wavelength selector 3.Transparent sample holder: cells/curvettes made of suitable material (Table 7- 2) 4.Radiation detector 5.Signal processor and readout

2.1Continuum Source: very broad range of wavelength e.g., Xe ( nm) arc lamp

2.2 Line source: containing a few discrete lines e.g., Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation (LASER): ultimate line source - Critical component: lasing medium - Lasing medium is pumped by external energy to excited states, and a few photons produced - Photons produced by the lasing transmit back and forth between a pair of mirror, trigging stimulated emission of photon of same energy  enormous amplification. Fig. 7-4 (p.169)

2.2.1 Simulated emission : Basis of Laser when the excited state is colliding with a photon whose energy matches the E y -E x, the excited electronic state will relax to ground state and simultaneously emit a photo of exactly the same energy and same direction and same phase angle. Coherent radiation with incoming photon. Fig. 7-5c (p.179)

2.2.2 Stimulated emission competing with the absorption which attenuates the incoming radiation Fig. 7-5c (p.179) Fig. 7-5d (p.179)

2.2.3Population inversion and amplification Number in higher states exceed the number in the lower states, so … Cannot produce population inversion in 2-level system. Need 3- or 4- levels where higher states are produced by… Fig. 7-6 (p.180) Fig. 7-7 (p.171)

Advantages of Laser Spatial coherence: all photons in-phase high power density low beam divergence Spectral coherence: high monochromatic Pulsed ( s) or continuous

3.1Ideal output for wavelength selector - separate electromagnetic into individual -component Fig (p.176)

3.2Absorption Filters colored glass or dye between two glass plates -wide bandwidth -low transmittance at band peaks -two filters can produce narrow band Fig (p.180)

3.3Interference filter Two thin sheets of metal sandwichd between glass plates, separated by transparent material Interference for transmitted wave and the reflected wave from 2 nd layer a. Constructive interference 2dsin  = n n: order of interference usually   90 , sin   1 =2d/n, Remember, this is the wavelength in the dielectric glass = air /  air =2d  /n  this particular wavelength is reinforced. b. If air  2d  /n destructive interference happens, and intensity lost only = 2d  /n can be transmitted through filter. 1st layer 2nd layer

3.4Monochromator entrance slit collimating lens or mirror grating focusing lens or mirror exit slit Fig (p.181)

Grating: a optically flat, polished surface with a large number of parallel and closed spaced grooves grooves/mm for UV-VIS region, grooves/mm for IR. Constructive interference between beams 1 and 2 d  sin  i +  d  sin  r =n n: order of interference For  i = 30 ,  r = 45 , and grating has 2000 lines/mm d = 1mm/2000 = 5x10 -7 m n = d(sin  i +  sin  r ) = 5x10 -7 (sin30  + sin45  ) =6.03x10 -7 m = 603nm = 603 nm for first order = nm for 2nd order = 201 nm for 3rd order Higher order diffraction gives different at same angle  Use filters to reduce multiple order intensity

Incident angle  i is fixed, but reflection angle  f can be adjusted by moving the exit slit position across the focal plane. Fig (p.181) y In practice, incident angle  i is fixed, but reflection angle  r can be adjusted by moving the exit slit position across the focal plane

Performance characteristics of monochromators Dispersion: ability to separate small wavelength differences Linear dispersion or reciprocal linear dispersion- variation in across the focal plane where y is the distance along line of AB in focal plane, f is the focal length of monochromator Exit width w required to separate 1 and 2

 Resolution/resolving power n: order of interference N: number of total grating grooves/blazes illuminated by radiation  ave