2023 Spring Meeting and 19th Global Congress on Process Safety
(117b) Non-Contact Gas Spectroscopy Exploting Tuning Fork-Based Light Detectors
Authors
Figure 1: (a) Transmittance spectrum of the QTF quartz measured using a Fourier transform spectrometer (continuous line). A 750 µm-thick quartz slab was employed for the measurement. (b) Responsivity as a function of the wavelength for three models of photovoltaic Vigo detectors, namely, PVI-4 (red line), PVI-6 (blue line), and PVI-10.6 (green line) HgCdTe, and for Thorlabs PDA10CF InGaAs Amplified Photodetector (black line), as provided by the device manufacturers. Responsivity of the QTF (black squares) employed as a photodetector.
The spectral response of the QTF-based photodetector was investigated by using a custom QTF with a resonance frequency of 9.78 kHz and quality factor of 11500 at atmospheric pressure. Five interchangeable laser sources operating at different wavelengths from 1.6 up to 10.35 µm were employed within TDLAS sensors. A spectrally flat responsivity of 2.2 kV/W was demonstrated (see Fig.1b), corresponding to a noise-equivalent power of 1.5 nW/Hz1/2, without employing any thermoelectrical cooling system. This tuning fork-based sensing configuration pave the way to low cost, modular spectrometers capable to perform non-contact analysis of continuous flow gas streams with highly variable composition and with a sensitivity in the part-per-billion range.
References:
[1] S. Dello Russo et al., Opt. Express 28, 19074-19084 (2020).
[2] T. Wei et al., Appl. Phys. Rev. 8, 041409 (2021).