industry news
Subscribe Now

New mid-infrared laser system could detect atmospheric chemicals

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Researchers at MIT and elsewhere have found a new way of using mid-infrared lasers to turn regions of molecules in the open air into glowing filaments of electrically charged gas, or plasma. The new method could make it possible to carry out remote environmental monitoring to detect a wide range of chemicals with high sensitivity.

The new system makes use of a mid-infrared ultra-fast pulsed laser system to generate the filaments, whose colors can reveal the chemical fingerprints of different molecules. The finding is being reported this week in the journal Optica, in a paper by principal investigator Kyung-Han Hong of MIT’s Research Laboratory of Electronics, and seven other researchers at MIT; in Binghamton, New York; and in Hamburg, Germany.

Hong explains that such filaments, as generated by lasers in the near-infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum, have been widely studied already because of their promise for uses such as laser-based rangefinding and remote sensing. The filament phenomenon, generated by high-power lasers, serves to counter the diffraction effects that usually take place when a laser beam passes through air. When the power level reaches a certain point and the filaments are generated, they provide a kind of self-guiding channel that keeps the laser beam tightly focused.

But it is the mid-infrared (mid-IR) wavelengths, rather than the near-IR, that offer the greatest promise for detecting a wide variety of biochemical compounds and air pollutants. Researchers who have tried to generate mid-IR filaments in open air have had little success until now, however.

Only one previous research team has ever succeeded in generating mid-IR laser filaments in air, but it did so at a much slower rate of about 20 pulses per second. The new work — which uses 1,000 pulses per second — is the first to be carried out at the high rates needed for practical detection tools, Hong says.

“People want to use this kind of technology to detect chemicals in the far distance, several kilometers away,” Hong says, but they have had a hard time making such systems work. One key to this team’s success is the use of a high-power femtosecond laser with pulses just 30 femtoseconds, or millionths of a billionth of a second, long. The longer the wavelength, the more laser peak power is needed to generate the desired filaments, due to stronger diffraction, he says. But the team’s femtosecond laser, coupled with what is known as a parametric amplifier, provided the necessary power for the task. This new laser system has been developed together with Franz X. Kaertner in Hamburg and other group members for last several years. At these mid-IR wavelengths, Hong says, this device produces “one of the highest peak-power levels in the world,” producing 100 gigawatts (GW, or billion watts) of peak power.

It takes at least 45 GW of power to generate the filaments at these mid-infrared wavelengths, he says, so this device easily meets that requirement, and the team proved that it did indeed work as expected. That now opens up the potential for detecting a very wide range of compounds in the air, from a distance.

Using spectrally broadened mid-IR laser filaments, “we can detect virtually any kind of molecule you want to detect,” Hong says, including various biohazards and pollutants, by detecting the exact color of the filament. In the mid-IR range, the absorption spectrum of specific chemicals can be easily analyzed.

So far, the experiments have been confined to shorter distances inside the lab, but the team expects that there’s no reason the same system wouldn’t work, with further development, at much larger scales. “This is just a proof-of-principle demonstration,” Hong says.

The research team also included MIT postdoc Houkun Liang; doctoral student Peter Krogen PhD ’16; alumnus Chien-Jen Lai PhD ’14; adjunct professor and group leader Franz X. Kaertner at the University of Hamburg, Germany; and Assistant Professor Bonggu Shim and his doctoral students at Binghamton University in New York. This work was funded by U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Apr 19, 2024
In today's rapidly evolving digital landscape, staying at the cutting edge is crucial to success. For MaxLinear, bridging the gap between firmware and hardware development has been pivotal. All of the company's products solve critical communication and high-frequency analysis...
Apr 18, 2024
Are you ready for a revolution in robotic technology (as opposed to a robotic revolution, of course)?...
Apr 18, 2024
See how Cisco accelerates library characterization and chip design with our cloud EDA tools, scaling access to SoC validation solutions and compute services.The post Cisco Accelerates Project Schedule by 66% Using Synopsys Cloud appeared first on Chip Design....

featured video

How MediaTek Optimizes SI Design with Cadence Optimality Explorer and Clarity 3D Solver

Sponsored by Cadence Design Systems

In the era of 5G/6G communication, signal integrity (SI) design considerations are important in high-speed interface design. MediaTek’s design process usually relies on human intuition, but with Cadence’s Optimality Intelligent System Explorer and Clarity 3D Solver, they’ve increased design productivity by 75X. The Optimality Explorer’s AI technology not only improves productivity, but also provides helpful insights and answers.

Learn how MediaTek uses Cadence tools in SI design

featured chalk talk

Automotive/Industrial PSoC™ High Voltage (HV) Overview
Sponsored by Mouser Electronics and Infineon
In this episode of Chalk Talk, Amelia Dalton and Marcelo Williams Silva from Infineon explore the multitude of benefits of Infineon’s PSoC 4 microcontroller family. They examine how the high precision analog blocks, high voltage subsystem, and integrated communication interfaces of these solutions can make a big difference when it comes to the footprint size, bill of materials and functional safety of your next automotive design.
Sep 12, 2023
27,202 views