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Keywords = circular multi-pass cell

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15 pages, 3527 KB  
Article
Photoacoustic Spectroscopy Combined with a Multipass Circular Cell to Detect Low Concentrations of Ammonia
by Oscar E. Bonilla-Manrique, Alejandro Pérez Gonzalez-Banfi, Jorge Viñuela Pérez and Gabriele Dessena
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(12), 6727; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15126727 - 16 Jun 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1943
Abstract
Photoacoustic spectroscopy (PAS) has become a valuable technique for trace gas detection due to its high sensitivity and potential for miniaturization. This study presents the development and evaluation of a near-infrared PAS system using a 1532 nm semiconductor laser and a multipass cell [...] Read more.
Photoacoustic spectroscopy (PAS) has become a valuable technique for trace gas detection due to its high sensitivity and potential for miniaturization. This study presents the development and evaluation of a near-infrared PAS system using a 1532 nm semiconductor laser and a multipass cell (MPC) designed to enhance the optical path and thereby improve the detection of ammonia (NH3). The minimum detection limit was determined to be 770 ppb, with a normalized noise equivalent absorption (NNEA) coefficient of 1.07 × 10−8 W cm−1 Hz−1/2. While competitive with similar PAS systems, these results indicate that mid-infrared technologies still offer superior detection thresholds. The findings suggest that while this near-infrared setup may not yet match the sensitivity of systems using quantum cascade lasers or QEPAS, it offers notable advantages in terms of simplicity, cost, and potential for field deployment. The system’s configuration makes it a viable and efficient tool for industrial gas monitoring and real-time environmental applications, with future improvements likely to come from transitioning to the mid-infrared region and advancing laser stabilization and miniaturization techniques. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Optical Sensors)
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15 pages, 3703 KB  
Article
Evaluation of Spatial Gas Temperature and Water Vapor Inhomogeneities in TDLAS in Circular Multipass Absorption Cells Used for the Analysis of Dynamic Tube Flows
by Felix Witt, Henning Bohlius and Volker Ebert
Sensors 2023, 23(9), 4345; https://doi.org/10.3390/s23094345 - 27 Apr 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2687
Abstract
The use of optical circular multipass absorption cells (CMPAC) in an open-path configuration enables the sampling free analysis of cylindrical gas flows with high temporal resolution and only minimal disturbances to the sample gas in the pipe. Combined with their robust unibody design, [...] Read more.
The use of optical circular multipass absorption cells (CMPAC) in an open-path configuration enables the sampling free analysis of cylindrical gas flows with high temporal resolution and only minimal disturbances to the sample gas in the pipe. Combined with their robust unibody design, CMPACs are a good option for many applications in atmospheric research and industrial process monitoring. When deployed in an open-path configuration, the effects of inhomogeneities in the gas temperature and composition have to be evaluated to ensure that the resulting measurement error is acceptable for a given application. Such an evaluation needs to consider the deviations caused by spectroscopic effects, e.g., nonlinear effects of temperature variations on the intensity of the spectral line, as well as the interaction of the temperature and concentration field with the characteristic laser beam pattern of the CMPAC. In this work we demonstrate this novel combined evaluation approach for the CMPAC used as part of the tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy (TDLAS) reference hygrometer in PTB’s dynH2O setup for the characterization of the dynamic response behavior of hygrometers. For this, we measured spatially resolved, 2D temperature and H2O concentration distributions, and combined them with spatially resolved simulated spectra to evaluate the inhomogeneity effects on the line area of the used H2O spectral line at 7299.43 cm−1. Our results indicate that for dynH2O, the deviations caused by the interaction between large concentration heterogeneities and the characteristic sampling of the beam pattern of the CMPAC are three orders of magnitude larger than deviations caused by small temperature heterogeneity induced spectroscopic effects. We also deduce that the assumption that the “path-integrated” H2O concentration derived with the open-path CMPAC setup represents an accurate H2O area average in the flow section covered by the CMPAC in fact shows significant differences of up to 16% and hence does not hold true when large H2O concentration gradients are present. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Papers in Optical Sensors 2023)
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10 pages, 3627 KB  
Article
Towards a Fast, Open-Path Laser Hygrometer for Airborne Eddy Covariance Measurements
by Felix Witt, Javis Nwaboh, Henning Bohlius, Astrid Lampert and Volker Ebert
Appl. Sci. 2021, 11(11), 5189; https://doi.org/10.3390/app11115189 - 3 Jun 2021
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3718
Abstract
Water vapor fluxes play a key role in the energy budget of the atmosphere, and better flux measurements are needed to improve our understanding of the formation of clouds and storms. Large-scale measurements of these fluxes are possible by employing the eddy correlation [...] Read more.
Water vapor fluxes play a key role in the energy budget of the atmosphere, and better flux measurements are needed to improve our understanding of the formation of clouds and storms. Large-scale measurements of these fluxes are possible by employing the eddy correlation (EC) method from an aircraft. A hygrometer used for such measurements needs to deliver a temporal resolution of at least 10 Hz while reliably operating in the harsh conditions on the exterior of an aircraft. Here, we present a design concept for a calibration-free, first-principles, open-path dTDLAS hygrometer with a planar, circular and rotationally symmetric multipass cell with new, angled coupling optics. From our measurements, the uncertainty of the instrument is estimated to be below 4.5% (coverage factor k = 1). A static intercomparison between a dTDLAS prototype of the new optics setup and a traceable dew point mirror hygrometer was conducted and showed a systematic relative deviation of 2.6% with a maximal relative error of 2.2%. Combined with a precision of around 1 ppm H2O at tropospheric conditions, the newly designed setup fulfills the static precision and accuracy requirements of the proposed airborne EC hygrometer. Full article
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11 pages, 2962 KB  
Article
Silicon Multi-Pass Gas Cell for Chip-Scale Gas Analysis by Absorption Spectroscopy
by Alaa Fathy, Yasser M. Sabry, Martine Gnambodoe-Capochichi, Frederic Marty, Diaa Khalil and Tarik Bourouina
Micromachines 2020, 11(5), 463; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi11050463 - 28 Apr 2020
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 5464
Abstract
Semiconductor and micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) technologies have been already proved as strong solutions for producing miniaturized optical spectrometers, light sources and photodetectors. However, the implementation of optical absorption spectroscopy for in-situ gas analysis requires further integration of a gas cell using the same [...] Read more.
Semiconductor and micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) technologies have been already proved as strong solutions for producing miniaturized optical spectrometers, light sources and photodetectors. However, the implementation of optical absorption spectroscopy for in-situ gas analysis requires further integration of a gas cell using the same technologies towards full integration of a complete gas analysis system-on-chip. Here, we propose design guidelines and experimental validation of a gas cell fabricated using MEMS technology. The architecture is based on a circular multi-pass gas cell in a miniaturized form. Simulation results based on the proposed modeling scheme helps in determining the optimum dimensions of the gas cell, given the constraints of micro-fabrication. The carbon dioxide spectral signature is successfully measured using the proposed integrated multi-pass gas cell coupled with a MEMS-based spectrometer. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue IMCO 2019)
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15 pages, 3965 KB  
Article
Generalized Optical Design of the Double-Row Circular Multi-Pass Cell
by Zheng Yang, Yin Guo, Xianshun Ming and Liqun Sun
Sensors 2018, 18(8), 2680; https://doi.org/10.3390/s18082680 - 15 Aug 2018
Cited by 14 | Viewed by 6958
Abstract
A new design of circular multi-pass cells (CMPC) with two rows of reflection spots on mirrors is presented. The effective optical path length (OPL) of this novel CMPC is double that of traditional CMPC with the same diameter and interval of spots. This [...] Read more.
A new design of circular multi-pass cells (CMPC) with two rows of reflection spots on mirrors is presented. The effective optical path length (OPL) of this novel CMPC is double that of traditional CMPC with the same diameter and interval of spots. This OPL can be readily adjusted to have regular intervals by rough rotation adjustment. We achieved a spatial separation of pre- and post-transfer optical systems that was adequately large even in the cases with a large number of passes. Analytical chief ray tracing analysis and a generalized method for parameter determination for designing the cell are presented in detail. The stable condition of the double-row CMPC (DR-CMPC) is also derived by the ABCD matrix method. Designs with maximum effective OPL of 74.72 m, 48.67 m and 24.57 m are demonstrated and verified by ray tracing simulations within a 25 cm diameter DR-CMPC. An adjustment of the regular intervals to 1 m can be achieved in both designs. The overall astigmatism of the design with an effective OPL of 74.72 m is only 9.30 × 10−6 mm, which is four orders of magnitude smaller than that of the traditional CMPC with similar geometric parameters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Gas Sensors)
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7 pages, 973 KB  
Article
Circular Polarization in Turbulent Blazar Jets
by Nicholas Roy MacDonald
Galaxies 2017, 5(4), 82; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies5040082 - 20 Nov 2017
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3858
Abstract
Circular polarization (CP) provides an invaluable probe into the underlying plasma content of relativistic jets. CP can be generated within the jet through a physical process known as linear birefringence. This is a physical mechanism through which initially linearly polarized emission produced in [...] Read more.
Circular polarization (CP) provides an invaluable probe into the underlying plasma content of relativistic jets. CP can be generated within the jet through a physical process known as linear birefringence. This is a physical mechanism through which initially linearly polarized emission produced in one region of the jet is attenuated by Faraday rotation as it passes through other regions of the jet with distinct magnetic field orientations. Marscher developed the turbulent extreme multi-zone (TEMZ) model of blazar emission which mimics these types of magnetic geometries with collections of thousands of plasma cells passing through a standing conical shock. I have recently developed a radiative transfer algorithm to generate synthetic images of the time-dependent circularly polarized intensity emanating from the TEMZ model at different radio frequencies. In this study, we produce synthetic multi-epoch observations that highlight the temporal variability in the circular polarization produced by the TEMZ model. We also explore the effect that different plasma compositions within the jet have on the resultant levels of CP. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Polarised Emission from Astrophysical Jets)
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