Paper
1 July 1991 High-efficiency resonance ionization mass spectrometric analysis by external laser cavity enhancement techniques
Stephen G. Johnson, E. L. Rios, Charles M. Miller, Bryan L. Fearey
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 1435, Optical Methods for Ultrasensitive Detection and Analysis: Techniques and Applications; (1991) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.44252
Event: Optics, Electro-Optics, and Laser Applications in Science and Engineering, 1991, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Abstract
A novel electronic circuit has been developed that detects absorption in one of two (reference and signal) laser beams with shot noise-limited sensitivity. The authors demonstrate its use as a simple shot noise limited spectroscopy by measuring several absorption lines of I2 vapor near 670 nm with a tunable diode laser. The noise-equivalent absorption in this double-beam method is 2 times the shot-noise-to-signal ratio of the signal beam. In this case, for 1.2 mW of power, the noise-equivalent absorption in a 1-Hz bandwidth was 4.2 X 10-8. This noise level was confirmed, although measurements were sometimes limited by interference fringes and laser tuning drift. These are technical, not fundamental, problems arising from unsophisticated optical equipment. This baseband method provides absorption spectra directly, eliminating laser excess noise without the somewhat elaborate signal generation and processing equipment needed in laser frequency modulation methods. The only modulation used in the system was the 0.5 to 1.0-kHz sweep of the diode laser current used to tune the laser output wavelength. The noise-cancelling circuit itself is not complex: workable versions can be constructed from readily available components at a cost of about 10 dollars.
© (1991) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Stephen G. Johnson, E. L. Rios, Charles M. Miller, and Bryan L. Fearey "High-efficiency resonance ionization mass spectrometric analysis by external laser cavity enhancement techniques", Proc. SPIE 1435, Optical Methods for Ultrasensitive Detection and Analysis: Techniques and Applications, (1 July 1991); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.44252
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KEYWORDS
Ionization

Laser resonators

Continuous wave operation

Spectroscopy

Reflectivity

Chemical species

Laser stabilization

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