Paper
30 October 2012 Active coherent laser spectrometer for remote detection and identification of chemicals
Neil A. MacLeod, Damien Weidmann
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Currently, there exists a capability gap for the remote detection and identification of threat chemicals. We report here on the development of an Active Coherent Laser Spectrometer (ACLaS) operating in the thermal infrared and capable of multi-species stand-off detection of chemicals at sub ppm.m levels. A bench top prototype of the instrument has been developed using distributed feedback mid-infrared quantum cascade lasers as spectroscopic sources. The instrument provides active eye-safe illumination of a topographic target and subsequent spectroscopic analysis through optical heterodyne detection of the diffuse backscattered field. Chemical selectivity is provided by the combination of the narrow laser spectral bandwidth (typically < 2 MHz) and frequency tunability that allows the recording of the full absorption spectrum of any species within the instrument line of sight. Stand-off detection at distances up to 12 m has been demonstrated on light molecules such as H2O, CH4 and N2O. A physical model of the stand-off detection scenario including ro-vibrational molecular absorption parameters was used in conjunction with a fitting algorithm to retrieve quantitative mixing ratio information on multiple absorbers.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Neil A. MacLeod and Damien Weidmann "Active coherent laser spectrometer for remote detection and identification of chemicals", Proc. SPIE 8546, Optics and Photonics for Counterterrorism, Crime Fighting, and Defence VIII, 85460H (30 October 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.974521
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Speckle

Absorption

Heterodyning

Laser spectroscopy

Spectroscopy

Quantum cascade lasers

Atmospheric modeling

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