| Literature DB >> 28018052 |
Jonas Rodewald1, Philipp Haslinger2, Nadine Dörre1, Benjamin A Stickler3, Armin Shayeghi1, Klaus Hornberger3, Markus Arndt1.
Abstract
We present matter-wave interferometry as a tool to advance spectroscopy for a wide class of nanoparticles, clusters and molecules. The high sensitivity of de Broglie interference fringes to external perturbations enables measurements in the limit of an individual particle absorbing only a single photon on average, or even no photon at all. The method allows one to extract structural and electronic information from the loss of the interference contrast. It is minimally invasive and works even for dilute ensembles.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28018052 PMCID: PMC5148790 DOI: 10.1007/s00340-016-6573-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Phys B ISSN: 0946-2171 Impact factor: 2.070
Fig. 1a UV–VIS spectroscopy in OTIMA: absorption of a single photon from a running laser wave imparts a recoil to the absorbing cluster or molecule. If the wavelength of the light is comparable to the semiclassical path separation of the delocalized particle, the interference fringe pattern experiences a measurable dephasing (Sect. 3) [19, 20]. Because of the small grating period (79 nm), single-color visible or infrared (VIS/IR) spectroscopy requires the collective momentum transfer of several photons or operation of the matter-wave interferometer in higher Talbot orders. b VIS/IR spectroscopy: can also be realized by combining a single (VIS/IR) photon of laser beam (red arrow) with a single UV photon from beam (green arrow) which provides the required momentum transfer (Sects. 6 and 7). c Polarizability spectroscopy: is the least invasive of all three techniques. The off-resonant dipole interaction with the intense laser field deforms the matter-wave front—leading to a loss of fringe contrast even without any photo-absorption. This method may be particularly useful for weakly bound van der Waals clusters (Sect. 8)
Fig. 2a The absorption of multiple photons from a monochromatic source is suppressed due to the anharmonicity bottleneck. b Internal vibrational relaxation (IVR) to other modes dissipates the energy and enables the repeated excitation of the same IR transition until sufficient momentum recoil has been accumulated to shift the fringe pattern measurably
Fig. 3a In IR–UV-recoil dip spectroscopy the matter-wave dephasing action of a UV photon is suppressed by emptying the ground state in a resonant IR transition. b In double resonant IR–UV-recoil spectroscopy the kick of the UV photon is conditioned on the prior absorption of the IR or VIS photon