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Stephanie Gadbois

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Title: Stephanie Gadbois


1
Stephanie Gadbois
LambDip Spectroscopy
2
Lamb Dip Spectroscopy
Follow me, the Cephalopod with the laser, for Q
A
  • First proposed by W.E. Lamb in 1964 as a method
    to overcome Doppler broadening and improve
    resolution power.
  • In 1969 C.C. Costain first observed through
    experiment using an effusive beam to eliminate
    Doppler broadening.
  • Applied in microwave and millimeter wave
    spectroscopy and later to laser spectroscopy

3
Recall Doppler Broadening
  • If an atom or molecule moving towards a detector
    with a velocity (va) has an observed transition
    frequency (fobs) it is related to the actual
    frequency by
  • fobs f /(1-va/c)
  • Since the molecules follow Maxwell Boltzman
    velocity distributions..
  • This resembles a Gaussian statistical shape.
  • Doppler broadening width

4
What W.E. Lamb predicted
  • Molecules which have the zero velocity component
    away from the source absorb radiation of the same
    frequency whether or not the radiation is
    traveling towards or away from the Reflector,
    resulting in saturation.
  • If saturation occurs then no further absorption
    takes place when it travels back to the Reflector
    and a dip in the power output results in the
    center of the line.
  • The width of the dip is called the natural line
    width (the inverse of the lifetime).

5
Basic Principle of Lamb Dip Spectroscopy
  • Figure A shows the shape of an absorption line
    broadened by the Doppler effect and the usual
    source-cell-detector approach.
  • Figure B shows the modification by a Reflector
    and the characteristic Lamb Dip that results from
    light beams traveling in both directions within
    the laser cavity.

6
Applications of Lamb Dip Spectroscopy to Lasers
  • Doppler broadening can be reduced by introducing
    a laser beam perpendicular to the velocity vector
    of a collimated molecular beam.
  • The absorption of laser light is a function of
    the laser frequency and can be measured with high
    resolution.
  • The position of the Lamb Dip gives the location
    of the transition frequency having no doppler
    shift (i.e. doppler-free absorption).

7
Doppler-free Absorption
  • A molecule moving with a velocity along a beam
    feels the beam frequency and the frequency of the
    reflected beam, so when a molecule absorbs the 2
    photons of different (counter-propagating) light
    beams, the transition energy is doppler-free.

8
Results high resolution doppler-free electronic
spectra
  • From the high resolution spectra, energy spectral
    lines can be assigned and this gives accurate,
    detailed information on electronic states,
    molecular structures, potential energy curves,
    electron spin and nuclear spin states.
  • This method is very useful to study the spectra
    of polyatomic molecules.

9
Assumptions of Lamb Dip Spectroscopy
  • That all other broadening factors must be small
    in comparison to doppler broadening
  • The radiation introduced must pass linearly
    through the cell and be monochromatic when
    compared to the natural line width.
  • The power source must be sufficiently high in
    order for saturation to occur.

10
Lamb Dip Spectroscopy is often called Saturation
Spectroscopy
  • It is based on the velocity selective saturation
    of Doppler-broadened molecular transitions, now
    the resolution is no longer limited by the
    Doppler width but rather the more narrower Lamb
    dip width.
  • Even if the Doppler profiles of 2 transitions
    overlap their narrow Lamb dips can be clearly
    separated.

11
Useful Applications of Lamb Dip Spectroscopy
  • High resolution of polyatomic molecules
  • Enhancing computer memory and storage
  • A tightly focused laser beam is used to burn a
    hole in a thin film at a location that
    corresponds to a bit. Then the second focused
    laser can detect that hole and read the bit.

12
What is the theory behind Lamb Dip /Saturation
Spectroscopy?
  • The narrow resonances, i.e. Lamb dips, that
    appear at the center of non-homogenous broadened
    lines interacting with counter-propagating laser
    beams essentially resulted from holes burned in
    the Maxwell-Boltzman velocity distribution.
  • This provided a way to find the center frequency
    of the line and remove the inhomogeneous line
    width.

13
References
  • Hollas, J. Micheal. Modern Spectroscopy. 4th
    Edition. John Wiley Sons Inc. (2004).
  • Hollas, J. Michael. High Resolution Spectroscopy.
    2nd Edition. John Wiley Sons Inc. (1998).
  • Demtroder, Wolfgang. Laser Spectroscopy Basic
    Concepts and Instrumentation. 2nd Edition.
    Springer-Verlag Berlin Heildelberg. (1998).
  • Stenholm, Stig. Foundations of Laser
    Spectroscopy. John Wiley Sons Inc. (1984).
  • Levenson, Mark. Introduction to Nonlinear Laser
    Spectroscopy. Academic Press. (1982).
  • Meijer,Gerard, Ubachs,Wim, Ter Meulen,J.J., and
    Dymanus,A. Molecular High-Resolution Lamb Dip
    Spectroscopy on OD and SiCl in a Beam. Chemical
    Physics Letters. Vol 139, (6). 603-611. 1987.
  • Remillard,D, and Weber,W.H. Sub-Doppler
    Resolution Limited Lamb-Dip Spectroscopy of NO
    with a Quantum Cascade Distributed Feedback
    Laser. Optics Express. Vol 7, (7). 243-249. 2000.
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