Tunable diode laser spectroscopy with wavelength modulation : a phasor decomposition method for calibration-free measurements of gas concentration and pressure

McGettrick, A.J. and Duffin, K. and Johnstone, W. and Stewart, G. and Moodie, D.G. (2008) Tunable diode laser spectroscopy with wavelength modulation : a phasor decomposition method for calibration-free measurements of gas concentration and pressure. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 26 (4). pp. 432-440. ISSN 0733-8724 (https://doi.org/10.1109/JLT.2007.912519)

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Abstract

method for analyzing signals in tunable diode laser spectroscopy with wavelength modulation are described. This new technique enables recovery of the isolated and normalized residual amplitude modulation (RAM) signal from measured first harmonic signals at any chosen fundamental modulation frequency. Like the previously reported RAM technique, this new approach is absolute, yielding gas absorption line shape functions, concentrations and pressures without the need for calibration, under certain defined operating conditions. It represents an advancement of the RAM technique in that it obviates the need to operate at a specific high frequency to achieve phase quadrature between the RAM and derivative signals: the signals may be recovered at their maximum levels at any frequency. Measurements of the 1650.96 nm and the 1666.2 nm rotation/vibration absorption line shape functions for 1% and 10% methane in nitrogen at various pressures are compared to theoretical predictions derived from HITRAN data. The excellent agreement confirms the validity of the new technique. Further measurements of concentration and pressure confirm the efficacy of the technique for determining concentration in industrial process environments where the pressure may be unknown and changing. With the above features this new method is particularly suited to stand alone instrumentation for on-line deployment in industrial processes where the calibration factors in the conventional approach would present significant difficulties.

ORCID iDs

McGettrick, A.J., Duffin, K., Johnstone, W. ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6376-9445, Stewart, G. and Moodie, D.G.;