RESUMO
We developed a cavity ringdown spectrometer by utilizing a step-scanning and dithering method for matching laser wavelengths to optical resonances of an optical cavity. Our approach is capable of working with two and more lasers for quasi-simultaneous measurements of multiple gas species. The developed system was tested with two lasers operating around 1654 nm and 1658 nm for spectral detections of 12CH4 and its isotope 13CH4 in air, respectively. The ringdown time of the empty cavity was about 340 µs. The achieved high detection sensitivity of a noise-equivalent absorption coefficient was 2.8 × 10-11 cm-1 Hz-1/2 or 1 × 10-11 cm-1 by averaging for 30 s. The uncertainty of the high precision determination of δ13CH4 in air is about 1.3. Such a system will be useful for future applications such as environmental monitoring.
Assuntos
Monitoramento Ambiental , Lasers , Análise EspectralRESUMO
We report the development of a laser gas analyzer that measures gas concentrations at a data rate of 100 Hz. This fast data rate helps eddy covariance calculations for gas fluxes in turbulent high wind speed environments. The laser gas analyzer is based on derivative laser absorption spectroscopy and set for measurements of water vapor (H2O, at wavelength ~1392 nm) and carbon dioxide (CO2, at ~2004 nm). This instrument, in combination with an ultrasonic anemometer, has been tested experimentally in both marine and terrestrial environments. First, we compared the accuracy of results between the laser gas analyzer and a high-quality commercial instrument with a max data rate of 20 Hz. We then analyzed and compared the correlation of H2O flux results at data rates of 100 Hz and 20 Hz in both high and low wind speeds to verify the contribution of high frequency components. The measurement results show that the contribution of 100 Hz data rate to flux calculations is about 11% compared to that measured with 20 Hz data rate, in an environment with wind speed of ~10 m/s. Therefore, it shows that the laser gas analyzer with high detection frequency is more suitable for measurements in high wind speed environments.
RESUMO
Tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy has been widely employed for gas sensing, where the gas concentration is often obtained from the absorption signal with a known or a fixed absorption path length. Nevertheless, there are also numerous applications in which the absorption path length is very challenging to retrieve, e.g., open path remote sensing and gas absorption in scattering media. In this work, a new approach, based on the wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS), has been developed to measure the gas absorption signal and the corresponding absorption path length simultaneously. The phase angle of the first harmonic signal (1f phase angle) in the WMS technique is utilized for retrieving the absorption path length as well as the gas absorption signal. This approach has been experimentally validated by measuring carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration in open path environment. The CO2 concentration is evaluated by measuring the reflectance signal from a distant object with hundreds of meters away from the system. The measurement accuracy of the absorption path length, evaluated from a 7-day continuous measurement, can reach up to 1%. The promising result has shown a great potential of utilizing the 1f phase angle for gas concentration measurements, e.g., open path remote sensing applications.
RESUMO
We specify water vapor among combustion products as the target gas based on tunable diode absorption spectroscopy in this paper. The direct absorption signals of water vapor after being processed can be used to calculate the gas concentration distributions and temperature distributions of the combustion region of methane and air flat flame furnace via algebraic reconstruction technique (ART). In the numerical simulation, reconstruction region is a grid of five by five, we assume a temperature and water vapor concentration distribution of 25 grid, then simulate different direction laser rays which cross the combustion region, generating projection of each ray, by ART reconstruction algorithm, it turns out that the temperature and water vapor distribution reconstruction error is less than 1%. In the experiment, we chose a distributed-feedback laser to scan the target gas H2O7 153.722, 7 153.748 and 7 154.354 cm(-1) as absorbtion line pair to measure temperature of the flame, we consider the former two line as one absorbtion line. By Stages multi-directional scanning, the authors abtain 16 different regions distributin of temperature and gas concentration of furnace when we collecte 30 different angle data by spectral data processing, reconstruction algorithm, two absorbtion line ratio method for temperature sensing, finding the temperature and water concentration are higher in the center than in the edge, it turns out that the reconstruction algorithm is good enough to achieve the distributions of gas concentration and temperature of the combustion region.
RESUMO
We demonstrate long-distance (≥100-km) synchronization of the phase of a radio-frequency reference over an optical-fiber network without needing to actively stabilize the optical path length. Frequency mixing is used to achieve passive phase-conjugate cancellation of fiber-length fluctuations, ensuring that the phase difference between the reference and synchronized oscillators is independent of the link length. The fractional radio-frequency-transfer stability through a 100-km "real-world" urban optical-fiber network is 6 × 10(-17) with an averaging time of 10(4) s. Our compensation technique is robust, providing long-term stability superior to that of a hydrogen maser. By combining our technique with the short-term stability provided by a remote, high-quality quartz oscillator, this system is potentially applicable to transcontinental optical-fiber time and frequency dissemination where the optical round-trip propagation time is significant.
RESUMO
The greenhouse-gas molecules CO(2), CH(4), and H(2)O are detected in air within a few ms by a novel cavity-ringdown laser-absorption spectroscopy technique using a rapidly swept optical cavity and multi-wavelength coherent radiation from a set of pre-tuned near-infrared diode lasers. The performance of various types of tunable diode laser, on which this technique depends, is evaluated. Our instrument is both sensitive and compact, as needed for reliable environmental monitoring with high absolute accuracy to detect trace concentrations of greenhouse gases in outdoor air.
Assuntos
Misturas Complexas/análise , Gases/análise , Lasers Semicondutores , Microquímica/instrumentação , Espectrofotometria Infravermelho/instrumentação , Transdutores , Desenho de Equipamento , Análise de Falha de EquipamentoRESUMO
A cavity ringdown spectrometer, based on a continuous-wave swept-frequency laser, enables efficient, rapid recording of wide-ranging absorption spectra as characteristic spectral signatures of airborne molecules. The rapidly swept laser frequency resonates with the longitudinal modes of the ringdown cavity, effectively sampling the absorption spectrum of an intracavity gas at intervals defined by the cavity's free spectral range and generating a full absorption spectrum within a single rapid sweep of the widely tunable laser frequency. We report a new analog detection scheme that registers a single data point for each buildup and ringdown decay event without logging details of the full signal waveform; this minimizes demand on digitizer speed and memory depth, reducing the time scale of data processing. This results in a compact, robust, easy-to-use instrument that offers fresh prospects for spectroscopic sensing of trace species in the atmosphere.