Cavity Ringdown Laser Absorption Spectroscopy: History, Development, and Application to Pulsed Molecular Beams.

نویسندگان

  • J. J. Scherer
  • J. B. Paul
  • A. O'Keefe
  • R. J. Saykally
چکیده

The measurement of electronic spectra of supersonically cooled molecules and clusters is a widely used approach for addressing many problems in chemistry. The most established techniques for making such measurements are laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) and resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI), and both have been employed very successfully in a large number of studies. However, both methods often fail for systems containing more than a few atoms, due to rapid internal conversion, predissociation, or other dynamical processes. Even for small systems, the vibronic band intensities are often contaminated by intramolecular relaxation dynamics; in such cases, these techniques cannot be used for reliable intensity measurements. For clusters that exhibit rapid photofragmentation, depletion spectroscopy can be employed quite effectively to measure their vibronic structure, but again, dynamic effects complicate the interpretation of spectra. The same considerations apply to other types of “action” spectroscopy. It would often be preferable to measure the electronic spectra of molecules and clusters in direct absorption, as this approach is the most straightforward and accurate means of determining absolute vibronic band intensities and for accessing states that are invisible to LIF or REMPI. The problem, of course, is that direct absorption methods are generally orders of magnitude less sensitive than the “action” techniques and are, therefore, difficult to apply to transient species, such as clusters or radicals. In this review, we describe a relatively new direct absorption technique that we have developed for measuring the electronic spectra of jet-cooled molecules and clusters with both high sensitivity and high spectral resolution. The method is based on measurement of the time rate of decay of a pulse of light trapped in a high reflectance optical cavity; we call it cavity ringdown laser absorption spectroscopy (CRLAS). In practice, pulsed laser light is injected into an optical cavity that is formed by a pair of highly reflective (R > 99.9%) mirrors. The small amount of light that is now trapped inside the cavity reflects back and forth between the two mirrors, with a small fraction (∼1 R) transmitting through each mirror with each pass. The resultant transmission of the circulating light is monitored at the output mirror as a function of time and allows the decay time of the cavity to be determined. A simple picture of the cavity decay event for the case where the laser pulse is temporally shorter than the cavity round trip transit time is presented in Figure 1. In this case, the intensity envelope of these discrete transmitted pulses exhibits a simple exponential decay. The time required for the cavity to decay to 1/e of the initial output pulse is called the “cavity ringdown” time. Determination of the ringdown time allows the absolute single pass transmission coefficient of the cavity to be determined with high accuracy, given the mirror spacing. The apparatus is converted to a sensitive absorption spectrometer simply by placing an absorbing medium between the two mirrors and recording the frequency dependent ringdown time of the cavity. Ideally, the ringdown time is a function of only the mirror reflectivities, cavity dimensions, and sample absorption. Absolute absorption intensities are obtained by subtracting the base-line transmission of the cavity, which is determined when the laser wavelength is off-resonance with all molecular transitions. † IBM Predoctoral Fellow. Current address: Sandia National Laboratories, M/S 9055, Livermore, CA 94551-0969. ‡ Los Gatos Research. 25 Chem. Rev. 1997, 97, 25−51

برای دانلود رایگان متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

High resolution pulsed infrared cavity ringdown spectroscopy: Application to laser ablated carbon clusters

We report the design and performance of a tunable, pulsed high resolution mid infrared cavity ringdown spectrometer. Stimulated Raman scattering in H2 /D2 is used to downconvert the output of a SLM Alexandrite ring laser ~720–800 nm! to the mid infrared ~3–8 mm!. The infrared frequency bandwidth was determined to be 9065 MHz from measurements of Doppler broadened OCS transitions at 5 mm. The mi...

متن کامل

HIGH RESOLUTION LASER SPECTROSCOPY IN COLD SUPERSONIC MOLECULAR BEAMS COOLING, REDUCTION OF DOPPLER WIDTH AND APPLICATION

The cooling of molecules during the adiabatic expansion of supersonic seeded molecular beams is reviewed and illustrated by the example of NO -molecules. The reduction of the Doppler width by collimation of the beam and the cooling to low rotational temperatures brings a significant simplification of the complex NO -absorption spectrum and allows its assignment. The measured rotational tem...

متن کامل

Direct Measurement of Water Cluster Concentrations by Infrared Cavity Ringdown Laser Absorption Spectroscopy

The recently developed technique of infrared cavity ringdown laser absorption spectroscopy (IR-CRLAS) has been employed in the 3.0 μm region to determine the absolute concentrations of water dimers, trimers, tetramers, and pentamers in a pulsed supersonic expansion for the first time. Additional spectral features are reported, one of which we assign to the bound O-H stretching bands of the hexa...

متن کامل

Cavity Ringdown Laser Spectroscopy (CRDS):

Cavity Ringdown Spectroscopy has become a widely used technique in the optical absorption analysis of atoms, molecules, and optical components. The technique allows the determination of total optical losses within a closed cavity comprised of two or more mirrors, and can be made arbitrarily more sensitive by improvments in the cavity mirror reflectivity. Part of the great attraction that Cavity...

متن کامل

Cavity ringdown laser absorption spectroscopy and time-of-flight mass spectroscopy of jet-cooled silver silicides

The cavity ringdown technique has been employed for the first spectroscopic characterization of the AgSi molecule, which is generated in a pulsed laser vaporization plasma reactor. A total of 20 rovibronic bands between 365 and 385 nm have been measured and analyzed to yield molecular properties for the X , B , and C S states of AgSi. A time-of-flight mass spectrometer simultaneously monitors s...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

عنوان ژورنال:
  • Chemical reviews

دوره 97 1  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 1997