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Applications of Cavity-Enhanced Direct Frequency Comb Spectroscopy Kevin Cossel Ye Group JILA/University of Colorado-Boulder OSU Symposium on Molecular.

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Presentation on theme: "Applications of Cavity-Enhanced Direct Frequency Comb Spectroscopy Kevin Cossel Ye Group JILA/University of Colorado-Boulder OSU Symposium on Molecular."— Presentation transcript:

1 Applications of Cavity-Enhanced Direct Frequency Comb Spectroscopy Kevin Cossel Ye Group JILA/University of Colorado-Boulder OSU Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy 2010

2 What is CE-DFCS? The 3 building blocks of Cavity-Enhanced Direct Frequency Comb Spectroscopy: 1 Mode-locked laser (frequency comb) 2 High-finesse enhancement cavity 3 Dispersive detection system M. J. Thorpe and J. Ye, Appl. Phys B 91, 397 (2008)

3 Benefits of frequency combs from S. T. Cundiff, J. Ye, and J. L. Hall, Scientific American, Apr 2008 Single ultrashort pulse Train of pulses Frequency combs provide narrow lines over a wide spectral bandwidth: High resolution Broad bandwidth Rapid acquisition Spatially coherent Multi-species detection with high sensitivity in near real time

4 Cavity-comb coupling Frequency Domain Frequency comb Cavity modes Time Domain Jones & Ye, Opt. Lett. 27, 1848 (2002). Mode-locked laser Cavity mode structure: Frequency comb structure: Thorpe et al., Opt. Express. 13, 882 (2005). Adler et al., Annu. Rev. Anal. Chem. 3, 175 (2010).

5 I. Trace contaminant detection

6 Trace gas detection in arsine Experimental setup: 250-MHz-Er:fiber laser with highly nonlinear fiber ( ≈ 1.2-2.0 µm) cavity with peak Finesse of 45000 spanning 1.78-1.95 µm arsine extremely toxic  set up in specialty lab at NIST (Optoelectronics Division, K. Bertness) Mirror data Laser spectrum

7 VIPA FSR 2D Spectrometer Mode-locked laser VIPA spectrometer High finesse optical cavity with intra-cavity gas sample >3000 channels simultaneously (typically 25 nm bandwidth) ~1 GHz resolution S. A. Diddams et al., Nature 445, 627 (2007) M. J. Thorpe et al., Opt. Express 16, 2387 (2008)

8 Arsine Results I Coverage from 1.74-1.97 µm (5050-5750 cm -1 ) Absorption sensitivity of 1  10 -7 cm -1 Hz -1/2 in nitrogen over 3000 simultaneous channels Measurement of H 2 O, CH 4, CO 2, H 2 S in nitrogen with minimum detectable concentrations from 7 ppb to 700 ppb

9 Arsine Results II Detection level for water in arsine of 31 ppb K.C. Cossel et al., Appl Phys B, in press (2010).

10 II. Breath Analysis

11 Application: breath analysis Medical research has (maybe) identified many molecules as markers for certain diseases in breath. Our focus: lung cancer & COPD Collaborators: CU Medical School (O. Reiss, J. Repine) CU Cancer Center (N. Peled) Samples: from cell cultures, rats, and humans What are the challenges? many molecules present in breath samples complex molecules have “messy” spectra recognize molecule spectra bottom line: Can we definitely link certain molecules to cancer?

12 Application: breath analysis Develop CE-DFCS system in the mid-IR Why use comb spectroscopy? simultaneous detection of multiple molecule species (generate marker pattern!) high sensitivity (fundamental mid-IR band!) fast acquisition (compared to GC-MS) high resolution (separate mixtures) First test with NIR comb: M. J. Thorpe et al., Opt. Express 16, 2387 (2008)

13 III. Atmospheric Chemistry

14 Important atmospheric measurements Isotope ratios ( 13 C, 18 O) Greenhouse gases (CH 4, CO 2, N 2 O) Pollutants (formaldehyde, benzene, acetone, NOx, nitric acid, etc.) Primary organics (e.g., isoprene) lead to aerosol formation Need fast acquisition over a broad bandwidth with high resolution in the mid-IR

15 Mid-infrared OPO Power and efficiencySpectral tunability Fan-out PPLN crystal; 10 W Yb:fiber pump more than 1 W over 1 µm tuning range continuous tunability from 2.8 to 4.8 µm (0.3 µm bandwidth)

16 Fourier Transform Spectrometer 22 bit, 1 MS/s digitization 160 MHz resolution 10 s sweep time Broad spectral acquisition  Frequency Comb Enhancement cavity or multipass cell High spectral brightness = short averaging time

17 Mid-IR Results I AtmosphericAtmospheric/Breath Breath Atmospheric/Breath

18 Mid-IR Results II Atmospheric Multiline detection advantage ~30 scan time 3.8×10 -8 cm -1 Hz -1/2 per 45,000 spectral elements Detection limits: H 2 CO (40 ppb), CH 4 (5 ppb), Isoprene (7 ppb), CO 2 (< 1 ppb), CH 3 OH (350 ppb single line or 40 ppb), …

19 Complex Mixture Analysis

20 Summary CE-DFCS provides a unique combination of broad bandwidth, high resolution, high sensitivity and rapid data acquisition Detection of many species and complex mixtures in near real time Collaborations: Scott Diddams (NIST) Martin Fermann (IMRA) Ingmar Hartl (IMRA) Axel Ruehl (IMRA) Ronald Holzwarth (Menlo) Kris Bertness (NIST - Arsine) Jun Feng (Matheson - Arsine) Mark Raynor (Matheson -Arsine) Miao Zhu (Agilent) CE-DFCS: Mike Thorpe Florian Adler Piotr Maslowski Aleksandra Foltynowicz Travis Briles Kevin Moll David Balslev-Clausen Matt Kirchner Funding: NSF, AFOSR, NIST, DARPA, DTRA, Agilent


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