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Blink and You Miss It—Catching Fleeting Catalytic Intermediates by High-Speed 785 nm NIR Raman Spectroscopy

February 1, 2017
By Cobolt
Article

Application Notebook

Application NotebookApplication Notebook-02-01-2017
Issue 2

It is only in the last two decades that Raman spectroscopy has begun to realize its potential as an almost universally applicable analytical technique from materials and life sciences applications to point of care analysis. This is primarily thanks to the availability of compact laser sources, high sensitivity cameras and high resolution compact spectrometers. In this application note the use of a stable high power NIR 785 nm laser is shown to be critical in achieving high time resolution and high signal to noise ratios while allowing for both fast and slow processes to be captured simultaneously.

Catching Transient Species

The weakness of detectors in the NIR region (800–1050 nm) with quantum efficiency dropping off over this range from ca. 40% to 0% is a key drawback of 785 nm Raman spectroscopy. Typically long exposure times and spectral averaging are required to achieve a good signal to noise level, however this approach seriously reduces the time resolution achieved (to mins) and means that weak signals for compounds that are present for only a few 100s of milliseconds cannot be observed. Using more efficient NIR detectors (e.g. back thinned CCDs) does not usually solve this problem due to etaloning that can be difficult to suppress. This drawback can be circumvented by a combination of efficient collection optical arrangements and above all high laser light fluxes. With a stable high powered laser (500 mW at sample) and a large confocal volume for collection to limit sample damage, time resolutions as low as 100 ms per spectrum can easily be achieved.

As an example, a oxidation reaction in which H2O2 is added to a solution containing a precatalyst is chosen. In this reaction only 0.25 mM precatalyst is present (far below that which can be detected by Raman spectroscopy but its absorption at 785 nm means that its spectrum is resonantly enhanced) and H2O2 is added to give a final concentration of 250 mM which decreases slowly over time. Within 1 s of addition of H2O2, however, the precatalyst becomes activated with an intermediate that is present only with a maximum concentration of 0.05 mM for 0.5 s and has an absorption band near 785 nm which results in enhancement of its Raman spectrum by ca. 10 000 times through resonance. However, it is observed only because high signal to noise spectra can be recorded at 200 ms intervals.

Lasers for Raman Spectroscopy

By far the most popular wavelength used for Raman spectroscopy is 785 nm, as it offers the best balance between avoiding fluorescence, absorption of the laser light (and Raman scattering) by the sample and therefore heating effects, and the limits to detector sensitivity. The lasers available at 785 nm are diode lasers, however, a narrow line width (<3 cm-1 for condensed phases such as solids and solutions and even narrower for gases) is essential for Raman spectroscopy in order to resolve individual Raman bands. The Cobolt 08-NLD 785 nm laser addresses all of the important performance features in a compact footprint and ensures reliability thanks to the proprietary manufacturing technique called HTCure™.

Cobolt AB
Vretenvägen 13, 17154 SOLNA, Sweden
tel. 46 8 545 912 30
Website: www.cobolt.se

Articles in this issue

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Cement Raw Meal Analysis by the Pressed Powder Method on Supermini200 Benchtop WDXRF
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Blink and You Miss It—Catching Fleeting Catalytic Intermediates by High-Speed 785 nm NIR Raman Spectroscopy
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Aerial Hyperspectral Imaging by BaySpec OCI Hyperspectral Imagers
Spec5_i1.jpg
On-Demand High-Purity Acid Production Using a Fully-Automated Acid Purification System
Spec8_i1.jpg
A Diamond ATR Study of Thin 225 nm Films on Glass
Spec9_i1.jpg
In-Process Raman Spectroscopy of Layered Materials
Spec10_i1.jpg
Pesticide Detection Using SERS Techniques
Spec12_i1.jpg
Confocal Raman Imaging in Pharmaceutical Research
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ATR–FT-IR Investigation of the Ocean Surface
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Investigating Crystallinity Using Low-Frequency Raman Spectroscopy: Applications in Pharmaceutical Analysis
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Emerging Trends and Opportunities in Discrete-Frequency Infrared and Raman Spectroscopic Imaging
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IsoMist XR: Improved Performance with Precise Temperature Control for any ICP Application
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Miniature 60 kV, 1000 μA 12 W X-ray Source
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Digestion and Analysis of Mixed Vitamin Samples in a Single Batch
Vol 32 No 2 Spectroscopy February 2017 Application Notebook PDF
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