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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(26): 6614-6619, 2018 06 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29891711

RESUMO

We present both an innovative theoretical model and an experimental validation of a molecular gas optically pumped far-infrared (OPFIR) laser at 0.25 THz that exhibits 10× greater efficiency (39% of the Manley-Rowe limit) and 1,000× smaller volume than comparable commercial lasers. Unlike previous OPFIR-laser models involving only a few energy levels that failed even qualitatively to match experiments at high pressures, our ab initio theory matches experiments quantitatively, within experimental uncertainties with no free parameters, by accurately capturing the interplay of millions of degrees of freedom in the laser. We show that previous OPFIR lasers were inefficient simply by being too large and that high powers favor high pressures and small cavities. We believe that these results will revive interest in OPFIR laser as a powerful and compact source of terahertz radiation.

2.
Opt Express ; 19(8): 7513-29, 2011 Apr 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21503059

RESUMO

We investigate laser emission from optically-pumped rotationally excited molecular gases confined in a metallic cavity. To this end, we have developed a theoretical framework able to accurately describe, both in the spatial and temporal domains, the molecular collisional and diffusion processes characterizing the operation of this class of lasers. The effect on the main lasing features of the spatial variation of the electric field intensity and the ohmic losses associated to each cavity mode are also included in our analysis. Our simulations show that, for the exemplary case of methyl fluoride gas confined in a cylindrical copper cavity, the region of maximum population inversion is located near the cavity walls. Based on this fact, our calculations show that the lowest lasing threshold intensity corresponds to the cavity mode that, while maximizing the spatial overlap between the corresponding population inversion and electric-field intensity distributions, simultaneously minimizes the absorption losses occurring at the cavity walls. The dependence of the lasing threshold intensity on both the gas pressure and the cavity radius is also analyzed and compared with experiment. We find that as the cavity size is varied, the interplay between the overall gain of the system and the corresponding ohmic losses allows for the existence of an optimal cavity radius which minimizes the intensity threshold for a large range of gas pressures. The theoretical analysis presented in this work expands the current understanding of lasing action in optically-pumped far-infrared lasers and, thus, could contribute to the development of a new class of compact far-infrared and terahertz sources able to operate efficiently at room temperature.

3.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 90(5): 053110, 2019 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31153269

RESUMO

Rotational spectroscopy has been used for decades for virtually unambiguous identification of gas phase molecular species, but it has rarely been used for the quantitative analysis of molecular concentrations. Challenges have included the nontrivial reconstruction of integrated line strengths from modulated spectra, the correlation of pressure-dependent line shape and strength with partial pressure, and the multiple standing wave interferences and modulation-induced line shape asymmetries that sensitively depend on source-chamber-detector alignment. Here, we introduce a quantitative analysis methodology that overcomes these challenges, reproducibly and accurately recovering gas molecule concentrations using a calibration procedure with a reference gas and a conversion based on calculated line strengths. The technique uses frequency-modulated rotational spectroscopy and recovers the integrated line strength from a Voigt line shape that spans the Doppler- and pressure-broadened regimes. Gas concentrations were accurately quantified to within the experimental error over more than three orders of magnitude, as confirmed by the cross calibration between CO and N2O and by the accurate recovery of the natural abundances of four N2O isotopologues. With this methodology, concentrations of hundreds of molecular species may be quantitatively measured down to the femtomolar regime using only a single calibration curve and the readily available libraries of calculated integrated line strengths, demonstrating the power of this technique for the quantitative gas-phase detection, identification, and quantification.

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