Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKatrina Hood Modified over 9 years ago
1
Broadband High-resolution Spectroscopy with Fabry-Perot Quantum Cascade Lasers Yin Wang and Gerard Wysocki Department of Electrical Engineering Princeton University, Princeton, NJ Email: gwysocki@princeton.eduWeb: pulse.princeton.edugwysocki@princeton.edupulse.princeton.edu ISMS 2014 June 17, 2014 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
2
Outline Motivation Operation principle of the developed spectrometer Experimental results Summary and future directions 2
3
Motivation Detecting large molecules using Mid-IR spectroscopy Distinguishing narrow spectral lines from broadband High spectral resolution Wide spectral range TNT Wide spectral range R. Furstenberg et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 93, 224103 2008 3 Source: http://i.usatoday.net
4
Fourier Transform Infra-red Spectrometer - FTIR Mid-IR Wide spectral range: 350-7100 cm -1 (1.4-28.6 μm) High spectral resolution Scales with size Large, slow, expensive Resolution: 0.0017 cm -1 Resolution: 0.125 cm -1 4
5
Nonlinear Optical Conversion Sources OPO, DFG + Broadband + High spectral resolution - Complex tuning - Large, expensive (OPO) - Low power (DFG) Frequency Combs + Ultra-broadband + High spectral resolution - Usually nonlinear conv. Based - Limited availability QCLs, ICLs +Robust, small +High spectral resolution - Narrow/moderate tuning range EXAMPLE QCLs: DFB-QCLs t hermal tuning range (~10 cm -1 ) EC-QCLs broadband (>300cm -1 ) but vibration sensitive DFB-QCL arrays Difficult beam-combining Capabilities and limitations of laser-based mid-IR spectrometers D. Hofstetter et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 75, 665 (1999) 5
6
How about FP-QCLs ? 6 A. Gordon, F. Capasso et al, “Multimode regimes in quantum cascade lasers: From coherent instabilities to spatial hole burning”, Phys Rev. A 77, 053804 (2008) Nonlinear processes promote multi-mode operation in FP-QCLs CW lasers show multi- mode lasing high above threshold Broad Spectral coverage Inter-mode phase-locking mechanism due to four wave mixing exists
7
Special - dispersion compensated FP-QCLs Mid-IR frequency comb in a specially designed FP-QCL realized by Hugi et al. Intermode-beat frequency <10Hz Control over mode-spacing and f o via RF injection Special gain design required low dispersion waveguide Can we use conventional FP-QCLs? simple and inexpensive !! Hugi et al Nature 492, 229 (2012) 6
8
Multi-heterodyne spectroscopy set-up Two conventional FP-QCLs Same gain material with different ridge-widths different I th and FSRs Output beams separated in space 1 GHz MCT photodetector 7 RF freq. Amplitude (absorption) Phase info. Y. Wang, G. Wysocki et al APL 104, 0311141 (2014)
9
FP-QCL mode structure Signal QCL LO QCL Difference in FSRs is not resolvable using FTIR Adjust bias current/laser temperature to achieve mode beatnotes within the detector bandwidth (1GHz) 8
10
Multi-heterodyne down-conversion results Faster detectors (e.g. QWIP) or smaller f increase optical frq. range Strong phase-lock between the different longitudinal modes in FP-QCLs ~15MHz beatnote linewidth for free running FP-QCLs optical resolution 1 min RF average spectrum Instantaneous RF spectrum 9
11
NH 3 broad absorption envelope retrieval Broad-band mid-IR spectroscopy using all four beat notes (no fine-tuning) Frequency coverage can be increased (faster detector, smaller f ) Frequency spacing can be decreased with longer devices 10
12
High resolution N 2 O absorption retrieval Signal FP-QCL modes tuned by current, LO FP-QCL current kept constant Spectral resolution ~ FWHM 15 MHz ~ 0.0005 cm -1 All beatnotes can be measured simultaneously broadband, high- resolution spectroscopy No-moving parts, all electronic tuning 11
13
Summary Demonstrated a robust dual-FP-QCL multi-heterodyne technique for broadband, high-resolution Mid-IR spectroscopy All solid-state design High spectral resolution (~0.0005 cm -1 ) demonstrated Studies of amplitude and phase noise in multi- heterodyne FP-QCL technique Use high bandwidth detector such as QWIP Proper selection of FP-QCLs with smaller FSR Parallel processing of all available beat notes Future directions: 12
14
NSF Research Center MIRTHE U.S. Environmental Protection Agency grant No. RD-83513701-0 Dr. Yamac Dikmelik ( Johns Hopkins University) for helpful discussions Prof. Federico Capasso (Harvard University), Dr. Laurent Diehl, Dr. Mariano Troccoli for providing FP chips for this study Acknowledgement 13
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.