New Method to Enable Faster and Precise Spectroscopic Investigations

Posted  by GoPhotonics

A laser light is known to have a very precise frequency compared to the one emitted by a simple lamp. This makes a laser light ideally suited to spectroscopic investigations where the properties of substances are determined on the basis of the frequencies at which they absorb light. A complete spectroscopic analysis generally requires time as the frequency of the laser has to be gradually scanned in order to obtain a full spectrogram. Now, a group of physicists at ETH in Zurich led by Ursula Keller at the Institute for Quantum Electronics have demonstrated a seminal method that could lead to simpler and faster spectroscopic investigations in the future. They have developed a novel technique for creating so-called dual frequency combs. The results were published in the scientific journal “Science”.

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Whereas a normal laser emits light at one frequency, a frequency comb features a large number of frequencies at a constant distance from one another – just like the marks on a ruler. This is made possible by using lasers that create extremely short periodic light pulses. Such pulse trains have a comb-like frequency spectrum, which can be broadened further using particular optical materials. In 2005 the Nobel Prize was awarded for laser-based precision spectroscopy including the optical frequency comb technique, to which Ursula Keller in collaboration with Harald Telle from PTB Braunschweig invented the key enabling technology for the stabilization of the comb in 1999.

In principle one could probe a substance simultaneously with many frequencies using such a frequency comb. In ordinary spectroscopy a part of the laser light is sent through the material to be studied, and the other part is used as a reference. The frequency of the laser is now steadily scanned, and at the same time the absorption of the laser light by the substance is measured relative to the reference beam using two photodetectors. The characteristic spectrogram of the substance is obtained from this frequency scan. Unfortunately, this procedure cannot be applied straightforwardly to a frequency comb. The different frequencies simultaneously contained in the comb would certainly be absorbed differently. The photodetector, however, would not be able to tell them apart. To do so, it would have to directly record the individual, superposed oscillations of the light, which, however, is impossible in practice because of their high frequency of several hundred Terahertz (a thousand billion oscillations per second).

According to the published results, the technique developed by Keller and her co-workers changes these fast and not directly measureable oscillations into much slower ones that can be easily detected with conventional electronics. This procedure relies on a trick that is used in a similar form by piano tuners. In order to obtain an equal tuning of the different chords of the same tone a piano tuner uses the beat produced by the superposition of two different frequencies. The beat pulsates at a speed that corresponds to the difference of the two superposed frequencies.

The researchers at ETH use a very similar method in which they create a second frequency comb, whose frequencies have a slightly different spacing than those of the first one. This creates pairs of frequencies, each of which results in a slightly different beat frequency. These beat frequencies are now in the Megahertz regime and can be easily measured using photodetectors.

While this kind of dual-comb spectroscopy has been around for a few years, the technique developed at ETH makes it considerably simpler and less expensive. The real novelty is the creation of the two frequency combs with just one laser, which would else have to be painstakingly stabilized with respect to each other, if created with two lasers. The trick the researchers use consists of a birefringent crystal that is inserted into a laser, which causes the light to travel slightly different distances according to its polarisation (i.e., the direction of oscillation of the electromagnetic wave). As a consequence, the two laser beams thus produced have slightly different pulse periods, which in turn leads to frequency combs with different frequency spacings. As the two frequency combs are created by the same laser, stabilizing them against each other becomes redundant.

A number of possible applications of the new technology present themselves. Since it allows one to produce a complete spectrogram in less than a thousandth of a second, it is ideally suited to measuring the concentration of substances in the environment or in the exhausts of factories. Fast flowing gases in petrochemical settings could also be analysed quickly, for example to monitor and control production processes.


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