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Lineshape and Sensitivity of Spectroscopic Signals of N 2 + in a Positive Column Collected Using NICE-OHVMS Michael Porambo, Andrew Mills, Brian Siller,

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Presentation on theme: "Lineshape and Sensitivity of Spectroscopic Signals of N 2 + in a Positive Column Collected Using NICE-OHVMS Michael Porambo, Andrew Mills, Brian Siller,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lineshape and Sensitivity of Spectroscopic Signals of N 2 + in a Positive Column Collected Using NICE-OHVMS Michael Porambo, Andrew Mills, Brian Siller, Benjamin J. McCall University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 20 June 2011

2 Outline Introduction Lineshape Description, Analysis, Ultra-high Resolution Spectroscopy Sensitivity Comparison Summary, Conclusions, Present and Future Work

3 Spectroscopic Techniques Velocity Modulation Spectroscopy (VMS) 1,2 Optical Heterodyne 3 Velocity Modulation Spectroscopy (OHVMS) 4 Cavity Enhanced Velocity Modulation Spectroscopy 4,5 Noise Immune Cavity Enhanced Optical Heterodyne Molecular Spectroscopy (NICE- OHMS) 6,7 6 Ye et al. J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 1998. 7 Foltynowicz et al. Appl. Phys. B, 2008. EOM 1 Gudeman and Saykally, Ann. Rev. Phys. Chem. 1984. 2 Stephenson and Saykally, Chem. Rev. 2005. 3 Bjorklund and Levenson, Appl. Phys. B 1983. 4 Lindsay, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Chicago, 2002. 4 Siller et al. Optics Lett. 2010. 5 Mills et al. Chem. Phys. Lett. 2010. Sample Noise Immune Cavity Enhanced Optical Heterodyne Velocity Modulation Spectroscopy (NICE- OHVMS)

4 NICE-OHVMS

5 N 2 + Signal with NICE-OHVMS NICE-OHVMS spectrum of Q 11 (14) of N 2 + acquired with 1 GHz heterodyne detection bandwidth. ~500 MHz ~1 GHz Lamb dips from optical saturation Carrier-carrier interaction Sideband-carrier interaction Sideband-sideband interaction A. U.

6 Heterodyne Detection Bandwidth As cavity length is scanned, FSR changes. Laser sidebands do not couple into the cavity as efficiently, noise immunity suffers. 1.02 GHz (9 × FSR) – 9 kHz shift in longitudinal mode with respect to sideband. 113 MHz (1 × FSR) – 1 kHz shift in longitudinal mode with respect to sideband. Relative Frequency (MHz)

7 Absorption and Dispersion Absorption Dispersion + -

8 Absorption and Dispersion Absorption and dispersion related by the Kramers- Kronig relations. Example for Gaussian absorption profile:

9 Heterodyne Detection Bandwidth Lock-In Amplifier Absorption Signal 40 kHz Plasma Frequency Ti:Sapph Laser EOM PZT Detector EOM 9 × Cavity FSR 1.02 GHz Lock-In Amplifier Dispersion Signal 90° Phase Shift 1 × Cavity FSR 113 MHz Y X Y X Absorption Dispersion YXYX

10 113 MHz Detection AbsorptionDispersion Lock-In X Lock-In Y DispersionAbsorption 113 MHz Sidebands 1 Cavity FSR

11 Lock-In X Lock-In Y No center Lamb dip in absorption Sub-Doppler Spectra AbsorptionDispersion Spectra calibrated with optical frequency comb Frequency precision to ~1 MHz!

12 Ultra-High Resolution Spectroscopy Red – Data Blue - Fit Sub-Doppler fitting equation modeled as convolution of Gaussian and Lorentzian absorption and dispersion profiles (2 absorption/each, 3 dispersion/each) Line center from fit: 326,187,572.2 ± 0.1 MHz After correcting for systematic problems, line center measured to within uncertainty of ~300 kHz! Red – Fit Blue - Data AbsorptionDispersion 113 MHz

13 Signal and Noise Calculations OHVMS (1 GHz) VMSCEVMS NICE-OHVMS (1 GHz) Signal-to-noise ratio calculated for different detection techniques under the same conditions. NICE-OHVMS S/N factor of 2 greater than the next sensitive technique!

14 Technique Comparison VMSOHVMS CEVMS NICE-OHVMS

15 Summary and Conclusions NICE-OHVMS addresses well challenges in direct absorption/dispersion spectroscopy of ions. Distinctive, absorption/dispersion lineshape with Lamb dips. Precise line centers obtained using Lamb dips and calibrating to optical frequency comb (~1 MHz precision). S/N greatly improved over VMS, OHVMS, and CEVMS.

16 Present and Future Work Vibrational spectroscopy in the mid-IR Positive column discharge setup with CW OPO (Aculight Argos). Study molecular ions of astronomical, fundamental chemical interest (e.g., CH 5 + ). Highly sensitive technique for molecular ion beam detection Direct absorption/dispersion spectroscopy of N 2 + in a fast ion beam. Stay tuned for next talk (MI11) on ion beam. Aculight Argos CW OPO http://www.lockheedmartin.com/data/assets/ms 2/pdf/ArgosSF.pdf McCall group ion beam instrument

17 Acknowledgments McCall Research Group Ben McCall Andrew Mills Brian Siller Sources of Funding –Air Force – Research Corp. –NASA – Univ. of Illinois –Dreyfus –Packard –NSF –Sloan

18 Mathematical Description Doppler broadened lineshape function Sub-Doppler lineshape function  fm : FM detection phase d : Detuning of carrier from transition frequency m : RF modulation frequency (1 GHz, 113 MHz)  abs : General absorption lineshape function  disp : General dispersion lineshape function A 0, A 1, A 2 : Power and modulation depth dependent

19 Frequency Comb Explanation? Mode-locked fs laser equally spaced lines in frequency (F REP ) Phase offset can be locked providing absolute calibration of comb lines. The comb can now be used as an absolute frequency reference. Unknown laser comb  beat frequency Beat frequency, repetition frequency, offset frequency and comb mode contribution to get laser frequency  Beat Frequency F REP F Offset Original Comb Doubled Comb Ti:Sapph Laser Frequency

20 Spectroscopic Techniques VMS Ion-neutral discrimination OHVMS Ion-neutral discrimination Zero-background detection/higher bandwidth CEVMS Ion-neutral discrimination Cavity increases signal Sub-Doppler features for ultra-high resolution spectroscopy NICE-OHVMS Ion-neutral discrimination High sensitivity Sub-Doppler spectroscopy Relative noise immunity EOM


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