Terahertz spectroscopy, which uses the band of electromagnetic radiation between microwaves and infrared light, is a promising security technology because it can extract the spectroscopic โfingerprintsโ of a wide range of materials, including chemicals used in explosives.
But traditional terahertz spectroscopy requires a radiation source thatโs heavy and about the size of a large suitcase, and it takes 15 to 30 minutes to analyze a single sample, rendering it impractical for most applications.
In the latest issue of the journal Optica, researchers from MITโs Research Laboratory of Electronics and their colleagues present a new terahertz spectroscopy system that uses a quantum cascade laser, a source of terahertz radiation thatโs the size of a computer chip. The system can extract a materialโs spectroscopic signature in just 100 microseconds.
The device is so efficient because it emits terahertz radiation in whatโs known as a โfrequency comb,โ meaning a range of frequencies that are perfectly evenly spaced.
โWith this work, we answer the question, โWhat is the real application of quantum-cascade laser frequency combs?โโ says Yang Yang, a graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science and first author on the new paper. โTerahertz is such a unique region that spectroscopy is probably the best application. And QCL-based frequency combs are a great candidate for spectroscopy.โ
Different materials absorb different frequencies of terahertz radiation to different degrees, giving each of them a unique terahertz-absorption profile. Traditionally, however, terahertz spectroscopy has required measuring a materialโs response to each frequency separately, a process that involves mechanically readjusting the spectroscopic apparatus. Thatโs why the method has been so time consuming.
Because the frequencies in a frequency comb are evenly spaced, however, itโs possible to mathematically reconstruct a materialโs absorption fingerprint from just a few measurements, without any mechanical adjustments.
Getting even
The trick is evening out the spacing in the comb. Quantum cascade lasers, like all electrically powered lasers, bounce electromagnetic radiation back and forth through a โgain mediumโ until the radiation has enough energy to escape. They emit radiation at multiple frequencies that are determined by the length of the gain medium.
But those frequencies are also dependent on the mediumโs refractive index, which describes the speed at which electromagnetic radiation passes through it. And the refractive index varies for different frequencies, so the gaps between frequencies in the comb vary, too.
To even out their lasersโ frequencies, the MIT researchers and their colleagues use an oddly shaped gain medium, with regular, symmetrical indentations in its sides that alter the mediumโs refractive index and restore uniformity to the distribution of the emitted frequencies.
Yang; his advisor, Qing Hu, the Distinguished Professor in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; and first author David Burghoff, who received his PhD in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT in 2014 and is now a research scientist in Huโs group, reported this design in Nature Photonics in 2014. But while their first prototype demonstrated the designโs feasibility, it in fact emitted two frequency combs, clustered around two different central frequencies, with a gap between them, which made it less than ideal for spectroscopy.
In the new work, Yang and Burghoff, who are joint first authors; Hu; Darren Hayton and Jian-Rong Gao of the Netherlands Institute for Space Research; and John Reno of Sandia National Laboratories developed a new gain medium that produces a single, unbroken frequency comb. Like the previous gain medium, the new one consists of hundreds of alternating layers of gallium arsenide and aluminum gallium arsenide, with different but precisely calibrated thicknesses.
Getting practical
As a proof of concept, the researchers used their system to measure the spectral signature of not a chemical sample but an optical device called an etalon, made from a wafer of gallium arsenide, whose spectral properties could be calculated theoretically in advance, providing a clear standard of comparison. The new systemโs measurements were a very good fit for the etalonโs terahertz-transmission profile, suggesting that it could be useful for detecting chemicals.
Although terahertz quantum cascade lasers are of chip scale, they need to be cooled to very low temperatures, so they require refrigerated housings that can be inconveniently bulky. Huโs group continues to work on the design of increasingly high-temperature quantum cascade lasers, but in the new paper, Yang and his colleagues demonstrated that they could extract a reliable spectroscopic signature from a target using only very short bursts of terahertz radiation. That could make terahertz spectroscopy practical even at low temperatures.
โWe used to consume 10 watts, but my laser turns on only 1 percent of the time, which significantly reduces the refrigeration constraints,โ Yang explains. โSo we can use compact-sized cooling.โ
โThis paper is a breakthrough, because these kinds of sources were not available in terahertz,โ says Gerard Wysocki, an assistant professor of electrical engineering at Princeton University. โQing Hu is the first to actually present terahertz frequency combs that are semiconductor devices, all integrated, which promise very compact broadband terahertz spectrometers.โ
โBecause they used these very inventive phase correction techniques, they have demonstrated that even with pulsed sources you can extract data that is reasonably high resolution already,โ Wysocki continues. โThatโs a technique that they are pioneering, and this is a great first step toward chemical sensing in the terahertz region.โ
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