| Literature DB >> 31795193 |
Zhensong Cao1, Zhixin Li2, Fei Xu3,4, Yongqian Wu5, Zixin Zhou1, Zhaomin Tong3,4, Weiguang Ma3,4, Wenyue Zhu1.
Abstract
Due to their advantages of having a wide bandwidth, low cost, and being easy to obtain, traditional photodetectors (PDs) are being widely applied in measurements of transient signals. The spatial inhomogeneity of such PD temporal responses was measured directly to account for the PD spatial effect of decay rate due to poor alignment in continuous wave cavity ringdown spectroscopy (CW-CRDS) experiments. Based on the measurements of three PDs (i.e., model 1611 (Newport), model 1811 (Newport), and model PDA10CF-EC (Thorlabs)), all the temporal responses followed a tendency of declining first and then rising, and steady platforms existed for the last two PDs. Moreover, as we expected, the closer the PD center was, the faster the response. On the other hand, the initial shut-off amplitude generally reached a larger value for a faster temporal response. As a result, the spatial effect can strongly influence the spectral line shape and value, which will introduce more errors into the precise measurements of spectral parameters using the CRDS technique if this effect is not considered. The defined effective detection area (EDA) of the PDs, which was close to the active area given by manufacturers, was the key parameter that should be paid more attention by researchers. Therefore, the PD should be aligned perfectly to make sure that the EDA covers the laser spot completely.Entities:
Keywords: cavity ringdown spectroscopy; spatial effect; spectral fidelity; temporal response
Year: 2019 PMID: 31795193 PMCID: PMC6928631 DOI: 10.3390/s19235232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Detailed information of three different photodetectors (PDs) employed in experiments.
| Type of PD | Manufacturer | Bandwidth (BW) | Rising time (0.35/BW) | PD Diameter | Window |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1611(DC output) | Newport | 0.02 MHz | 17.5 μs | 0.1 mm | Ball lens (d = 1.5mm) |
| 1811 | Newport | 125 MHz | 2.8 ns | 0.3 mm | flat |
| PDA10CF-EC | Thorlabs | 150 MHz | 2.3 ns | 0.5 mm | flat |
Figure 1The transients in three typical positions of three detectors: (a–c) model 1611, (d–f) model 1811, (g–i) model PDA10CF-EC. (a–i) The data correspond to the PD positions 1 to 9 in Figure 2.
Figure 2The two-dimensional contour plot of initial shut-off amplitudes and temporal responses as functions of vertical and horizontal positions of three different PDs. Panels (a), (c) and (e) show the initial shut-off amplitudes for the detectors of models 1611 (Newport), 1811 (Newport), and PDA10CF-EC (Thorlabs), respectively, and Panels (b), (d) and (f) show their corresponding ringdown times. The numbers 1 to 9 represent the measurement positions of Figure 1a–i.
Figure 3Setup designed for continuous wave cavity ringdown spectroscopy (CW-CRDS) experiments. Note: AOM = acoustic-optic modulator; DAQ = data acquisition card; PD = photodetector.
Figure 4A group of gathered cavity decay signals when the laser focus of the PD was located in different positions. The red curve on the top of each decay signal shows the single exponential fitting and the residual is shown in the lower panel.
Figure 5Measurements of (a) ringdown time and (b) initial shut-off amplitude as a function of relative vertical PD position when the PD was located behind lens 2 at a distance of 20 mm, 35 mm, and 50 mm.
Figure 6The measured response times (a) and initial shut-off amplitudes (b) as a function of relative vertical position for CRDS (solid squares) and PD (solid circles), respectively.
Figure 7Measured absorption lines of C2H2 gas at the wavenumber of 6531.7805 cm−1. The cavity was filled with the 507 ppm C2H2 gas balanced with nitrogen and the total sample pressure was controlled to be about 1.88 mbar: (a) ringdown times; (b) absorption coefficients.