Thermal Lensing Thermal lensing or photothermal deflection may be thought of as ultra-sensitive absorption spectroscopy using a pump laser as the excitation source. It is based upon the idea that the analyte molecules in a sample will absorb light when the energy of the light is equal to the energy of a rotational, vibrational, or electronic transition just as in normal microwave, IR, and UV-Vis spectroscopy. However the thermal lensing technique makes use of the fact that once the molecules have been excited with the pump laser, some of them will lose energy through collisions with the surrounding medium much like in photoacoustic spectroscopy. This leads to a change in the density of the medium in the region near the focus of the excitation light, again due to the transfer of the excitation energy to the medium. The density at the focus is rarified and slightly away from the focus it may be more dense as the molecules collide and essentially move outward from the focus. The index of refraction then changes as a function of the time that the laser is focused on the sample (essentially a temperature change), and on the distance from the laser focus. The formation of the lens is essentially caused by a change in the index of refraction. Thus the pump laser which is tuned to the wavelength of light that is absorbed by the analyte will cause an index gradient or thermal lens in the sample. The index gradient is from a thermal change due to heating by the absorbed pump laser. This transient thermal lens can be probed by monitoring how a second probe laser, which is passed through the focal region of the pump laser, is deflected away from or onto a detector which monitors the probe beam intensity. Based on this one would expect the thermal lensing signal to depend on the following: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) Lets look at the experimental setup to perform this experiment including a more detailed look at the focus of the pump and probe beams. This experiment may be accomplished with a pump beam that is either a chopped cw laser beam or a pulsed laser such as a YAG pumped dye laser and a stable cw probe laser that is also typically chopped as shown in the diagram. Figure of Experimental Layout Figure of Laser Beam Overlap Let us also look at some experimental data here first to see if our expectations are true and then we'll look at the eqn. which predicts the thermal lensing signal which is a ratio of the signal hitting the photodiode with the pump laser to the signal hitting the photodiode without the pump laser. Figure of Thermal lensing signal from 10 Torr NO2 as a function of cell pressure Figure of Thermal Lensing signal from NO2 as a function of cell pressure and pump laser power. Figure of Thermal Lensing signal from 10 Torr NO2 as a function of the solvent gas pressure and the solvent gas identity The signal of the themal lens will essentially be tied to the focal length of the induced thermal lens. For the case of a pulsed pump laser 1/f(t) = 1/fo (1+2t/tc)- 2 1/fo = (4 L D N h p H) / (k J w1p4 ) (d/dT) (2/) fo = focal length right after the heating pulse (instant it pulses into the sample) f(t) = the time dependence of the focal length of the thermal lens tc is the decay time constant = wp2 /(4D) w1p is the beam radius of the pump (heating) laser at the sample w1p2 = wop2 (1-z'2 /bp2 ) wop is the beam radius at the beam waist of pump laser bp is the confocal distance bp=wop2 /p z' is the sample position from the beam waist of the pump (heating) laser z = z' + zo z is the distance from the beam waist of the probe laser to the sample zo is the separation of the beam waist positions of the heating and probe laser D is the thermal diffusivity D=k/(Cp) N is the number density such as molecules/cm3 k is the thermal conductivity is the density Cp is the constant pressure specific heat L is the sample length p is the frequency of the pump (heating) laser is the absorption cross section H is the total output energy of the pump laser J is Joules Constant WHEN the focal length of the thermal lens is long, then the signal intensity is given by: Sp = -2z / f = [Ip(t =) - Ip(t=t)] / Ip(t=t) Ip(t=) is the intensity just before the heating pulse Ip(t=t) is the intensity of the probe beam just after the irradiation pulse So Sp = -8LDNhpH /(k J wop4 ) (d/dT) 2/ (1+2t/tc)- 2 z / [1+((z-zo)2 /bp2 )2 ] Thus for maximum intensity z = {2zo± [4zo + 3(zo2 +bp2 )]½ } / 3 Using this condition one can find Sp(t) = Sp(t=0)(1+ 2t/tc)- 2 where Sp(t=0) = 3½ [(hp2 H)/(cwp2 )] {D/k (d/dT)} (LN Also for pulsed laser [(hp2 H)/(cwp2 )]=Et/(pwop2 ) where Et=pulsed energy of pump laser So the terms in [ ] are terms that are characteristic of the pump (heating) laser The terms in { } are the characteristics of the solvent or the medium D (d/dT) / k = (d/dT) / (Cp) The last term in the ( ) are characteristic of the analyte and L N 2.303 where A is the absorbance The normal UV-Vis signal is given by Suvvis = 2.303 A So there is an enhancement factor then for the pulsed excitation which is Enhancement factor pulsed laser Ep=Sp(t=0)/Suvvis = -33 / 2 [Et/(pwop2 )]{1/(Cp)(d/dT)} The characteristic time constant, tc is obtained by: tc = wop2 /(3D) = wop2 Cp /(3k) Calculation of the enhancement factors from the physical parameters provides us information about the sensitivity of Thermal Lensing. For a pulse energy of 1 mJ/pulse and a beam waist size of 0.1mm one can calculate the enhancement factor and also the characteristic time constants. For a cw system Ec = -Po /(ck) (d/dT) Po is the output power of the cw pump (heating) laser c is the wavelength of the probe laser k is the thermal conductivity Applications Trace Detection of Pesticides in Water Faubel, Schulz et. Al. Jounal de Physique, 1994 Performances of related techniques: Photoacoustic Spectroscopy Photothermal Deflection Photothermal Lensing were compared with conventional absorbance data taken on a UV-Vis spectrophotometer for solutions of pesticides in water. Samples were: 2-methyl-4,6 dinitrophenol (DNOC) 2-sec-butyl-4,6-dinitrophenol (Dinoseb) 2-tert-butyl-4,6-dinitrophenol (dinoterb) 2,4 dinitrophenol (DNP) in distilled water The UV-Vis Spectrophotometer used was a Cary 2400. The photoacoustic system is a single beam instrument using a XeCl excimer laser as the excitation source to a dye laser. The dye laser produces a beam at 364 nm whih impinges on a sample solution confined in temp. controlled cell. A piezoelectric transducer is incontact with the sample and measures the signal amplitude of the resulting photoacoustic wave. The output is filtered and fed into a preamplifier and a boxcar integrator. The thermal lensing system is shown in the figure A cw UV Ar-ion laser (364nm) pump beam modulated around 10 Hz by a mechanical chopper impinges on a quartz fluorescence curvet. A HeNe probe laser beam at 632.8 nm is focused to intersect with the Ar-ion pump beam either in a collinear fashion or perpendicular to the propagation of the pump beam. In photothermal deflection spectroscopy (PDS) mode, the deflection of the HeNe probe beam is measured by a two dimensional position sensitive device such as a CCD. In thermal lensing (TL) mode the position sensitive device is replaced with a photodiode. In photothermal phase shift (PTPS) molde measurements are performed with the help of a Mach Zehnder interferometer with the sample cell placed on one arm of the interferometer. The following table gives a comparison of the detection limits for DNOC when using the different techniques. DNOC in μg/kg Limits of Detection Cary 2400 PAS 15 PDS A calibration curve for DNOC using the TL is given in the figure Similar Results were obtained for the other pesticides. TL PTPS Also a pulsed probe laser was also used and the cw laser performed better by a factor of about 2. Note that according to EPA and CEC standards, detection limits of 0.1 μg/kg (0.1 ppb) for pesticides in drinking water are required. The experiment was also tried using the PAS and TL detectors after an HPLC chromatographic instrument. The following table gives a comparison of the detection limits of DNP and DNOC for the different detector/HPLC combinations. Specimen DNP μg/kg DNOC μg/kg UV-diode array 11 10 PAS TL Note that the TL system gave the best results in both cases and had a detection limit that was between 10 and 100 times more sensitive than the conventional spectrometer. Thermal Lensing for Harsh Environments Supercritical Water As a result of the high pressures and temperatures necessary for SCW conditions (above the critical point of water of 22.4 MPa and 374 °C), direct optical spectroscopic analysis of analytes is difficult. It is necessary to construct sample cells capable of surviving these extreme conditions that also allow transmission of the optical signal. Optical windows must be thick and of small diameter. The seating of the windows, and the optical properties of the window materials, change as the water is heated and pressurized making alignment especially difficult. Limiting factors for in situ studies include the sensitivity of the instrumentation and applicability of the wavelengths available. For example, UV/vis spectroscopy is usable down to a ppm level and applicable to a wide range of organic compounds, but many compounds only absorb in the deep UV portion of this spectrum. Absorption measurements in this region require special window materials, and for supercritical measurements these materials also must have small temperature and pressure coefficients. In addition, as the windows have to be of small diameter, absorption measurements are difficult to achieve using a conventional light source. In contrast, thermal lensing (also called thermal deflection) is a laser-based, ultrasensitive, UV-vis absorption technique. It has been used to measure and monitor the concentration of analytes absorbing in the visible and ultraviolet region at the 10-7 absorbance unit level and is more readily employed in a harsh environment. In a crossed beam arrangement, either pulsed or continuous-wave lasers can be used as the pump beam, and a stable continuous laser can be used for the probe beam. For these experiments, the aperature size necessary can be quite small. Theoretically, the thermal lens signal would be enhanced in supercritical water over the normal signal expected from UV-Vis absorbance. The enhancement of the thermal lens depends on several factors and is proportional to the following Thermal Lensing Signal ~ dη/dT Ep / (λp κ) where dη/dT is the constant pressure temperature dependence of the refractive index, Ep is the pump laser power, κ is the sample thermal conductivity, and λp is the wavelength of the probe laser. On the basis of this equation, it can be seen that the lens signal will be greatest for solvents that have low thermal conductivities, such as organics, but exhibit less sensitivity in aqueous solution where the thermal conductivity is higher. Reports of the use of thermal lensing in supercritical CO2 describe a large enhancement in the signal strength. Because the coefficient of thermal expansion of a fluid diverges at the critical point, the index of refraction change with temperature should be very large, and thus the analytical sensitivity of the thermal lensing technique should be greatly enhanced. In this study, a supercritical water cell was built. Solutions of benzoic acid in water were placed in the cell. The fourth harmonic laser beam from a Nd:YAG at 266nm was used as the pump laser. The extinction coefficient for benzoic acid at this wavelength is about 800 L/(mol cm) at this wavelength. A schematic of the supercritical water cell is shown here along with a diagram of the TL experimental setup. Note that an Ar ion laser was used as the probe beam and a photomultiplier tube with a pinhole in front of it was used as the detector in this experiment. signal -1.00E-06 0.45 0.4 0.35 0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 -0.05 0.00E+00 2.5e-3M 1.25e-3M 2.5e-4M water 1.00E-06 time (us) 2.00E-06 The signal detected by the photomultiplier tube gave the following results. Integration of the area under the larger peaks at 800 ns gives the following plot of integrated signal vs concentration of benzoic acid in water. Note that the detection limits are in the mmol range. Thermal Lensing in a Supercooled Jet Expansion We talked about how CARS, SRG, or SRL could be useful in supercooled jet expansions. Well one day we were setting up an Inverse Raman experiment to determine the temperature obtained in a supercooled jet expansion of acetylene and possibly to look for dimmers and trimers. We were using as a pump laser, the output from a ring dye-laser using Rhodamine 590 dye. The wavelength was around 570 nm. As a probe, the 568 nm single-mode output (200 mW, 1MHz bandwidth) of a krypton ion laser was utilized. To avoid detector damage, this laser was chopped at 10 Hz to produce 100us pulses which overlapped the 10ns pump pulse. See the figure of the experimental setup. The following figure shows the pure rotational Inverse Raman Spectrum that was obtained. Well in the process of doing this, we also noticed some other depletion of the probe laser in the SRL that we could not explain and they had a longer decay time dependence. What do you think it turned out to be? The υ2 + 5υ3 vibrational combination band of acetylene at 17518.8 cm-1 or 570.8 nm. 2 = 1973.8 cm- 1 3 = 3287 cm- 1 Thus the geometry used in the SRL experiment turned out to be an excellent setup for thermal lensing experiments of high lying combination bands. Interesting, right? To be able to measure combination bands with such good signal strength and resolution was incredible to us at least. We use the thermal lensing then to also measure the temperature based on the rotational structure on the vibrational combination bands. One may wonder whether energy is released by cascading through the vibrational levels or if it is primarily through the rotational levels. Based on the information presented above about the thermal lensing signal, the signal for a particular J value should be given by: IJ = Const. x |Er + Ev| gNJ S(J) exp [-EJ/kT] Er = incremental change in the rotational energy due to the absorption Ev = incremental change in the vibrational energy due to the absorption EJ = rotational energy of the level J in the ground state gNJ = the nuclear spin degeneracy S(J) = line strength factor for the transition Const. - contains total concentration of absorbing molecules, the pump laser power, and instrument factors A plot of ln [IJ/( Const. x |Er + Ev| gNJ S(J)) ] vs EJ and varying the Ev values gives the following. When Ev is assumed to be zero a fit of R2 = 0.85 is achieved, but once Ev is above 200 cm- 1 then fits of 0.95 to 0.97 when all 17500 cm- 1 of vibrational energy contribute. This is the case both in the static cell at 298K and in the jet. Also the slope of the line give us the temperature and assuming Ev = 200cm- 1 it is calculated to be 316 ±12 K in the static cell and 125± 6 K in the cooled jet expansion. This is a bit higher than the temperature of 110 ± 10 calculated from the Inverse Raman spectrum of the cooled jet. Furthemore, one can get an idea of the collisions that are taking place in the jet from the bandwidth of the Raman Loss spectrum. The Doppler width for the rotational SRL lines is very small < 10 MHz and since the bandwidth of the probe and pump lasers that we were using is about 100 MHz one can use the following eqn. to determine an estimate of the collisions from the linewidth See linewidth figure Assuming a Voigt Profile v for the observed bands and a Lorentzian collisional linewidth L v = 0.5 L + [0.25 L2 + (I + Dop)2 ] 0 . 5 I = Dop = L = v = Value of 10MHz per Torr were determined and from this one calculates that 800 dephasing collisions occur in the static cell Based on an isentropic expansion one can infer that about collisions would take place in going from 500 to 750 micron distance from the orifice. Looking at the linewidth of the thermal lens it is much larger than the Raman loss?