Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel...

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Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia

Transcript of Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel...

Page 1: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Saturation of the NO2 ν1+ν3 and the CH4 ν3 Transitions in Helium

Nanodroplets

Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann

Department of ChemistryUniversity of Virginia

Page 2: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Why study Saturation of CH4 and NO2?

• By studying the saturation of these molecules we will try to understand the line shapes in nanodroplets which are inhomogenous.

• By studying relaxation we can try and find the inhomogenous relaxation rates

• Try and understand the relationship between the molecules and a superfluid

Page 3: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Nozzle Diameter = 10 μmSkimmer = 400 μmNozzle T ≥ 16 KBacking Pressure ≤ 60 Bar

LHe

Skimmer

Nozzle

Closed CircuitRefrigeratorsHe

Chopper

Pickup cell

Multipass Cell

1.5K bolometer N.E.P. ~ 2x10-14 W/Hz1/2

10 20 30 45 cm>5000 L/s 2500 L/s

IR OPO 2560 – 3125 cm-1

Machine Schematic

Bolometer noise ~ beam noise ~ 10-5 of chopped beam signal(1 Hz BW)

Page 4: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Acculight Argos OPO

S P I

Wavemeter

To Spectrometer

OPO

Powermeter

150 MHz etalon7.5 GHz

etalon

Approximately 1.75 W of power measured entering the polarizer and upwards of 0.7W entering the spectrometer.

Produces over 2 W of CW over the tunable range of 3.2 – 3.9 μm. Continuous scans of 45 GHz. Also produces 2 - 5 W of 1.5 μm light.

MgF2 Polarizer

Page 5: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Perry cell

Power MeterThe Focal Spot was determined to be 27 µm in diameter. Peak power is equal to 240 kW/cm2

He Beam

Lens

Page 6: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Perry Cell Measurements I

Page 7: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Perry Cell Measurements 2

Page 8: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Beam Quality Singe Pass

R2 = 0.9898

Page 9: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Beam Quality Multi Pass

R2 = 0.98015

Page 10: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

NO2 spectrum in He~5000

NO2 v1 + v3 R(0) ->

.

Page 11: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

NO2 Signal vs PowerThe R(0) Line is found at 2905.566 cm-1 and the FWHM is 0.035 cm-1.

Page 12: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

NO2 Signal vs Power

Page 13: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

NO2 Signal vs Power

S = a*P/(1+P/Ps)a = 58.954Ps = 0.527(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 0.451

Page 14: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

NO2 Signal vs Power

S = a*P/(1+P/Ps)a = 58.954Ps = 0.527(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 0.451

S = a*I/((1+P/Ps)½) a = 68.751Ps = 0.117(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 0.651

Page 15: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

NO2 Widths

Page 16: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

NO2 WidthsΔν = Δν0((1+I/Is)½)

Homogenous CaseIs = 150 kW/cm2

Δν0 = 0.033(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 1.9 x10-3

Page 17: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Methane R(0) LineThe R(0) Line is found at 3029.07 cm-1 and the FWHM is 0.20 cm-1.

Page 18: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Methane Signal vs Power

Page 19: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Methane Signal vs Power

S = a*P/(1+P/Ps)a = 41.713Ps = 0.458(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 0.152

Page 20: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Methane Signal vs Power

S = a*P/(1+P/Ps)a = 41.713Ps = 0.458(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 0.152

S = a*P/((1+P/Ps)½) a = 49.723Ps = 0.1(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 0.184

Page 21: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Methane Widths

Page 22: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Methane WidthsΔν = Δν0((1+I/Is)½)

Homogenous CasePs = 0.458Δν0 = 0.172(Χ2/(Np-2))½ = 1.7 x10-3

Page 23: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

ResultsNO2 CH4

Is (kW/cm2) 150 130

Transition Dipole (D)

0.05 0.057

T1T2 (ns2) 0.31 0.26T1 (ns) 1.0 5.0

T1T2 = (hbar*ε*c)/(2*μ*Is)

Page 24: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Results II

• Knowing that the focal point diameter is 27 µm and the speed of the beam is 450 m/s then we can determine that the NO2 spends 60ns in each crossing with the beam

• We believe that by comparing our T1 time for methane of 5 ns to a previous result by Momose’ group for the v4 R(0) line of methane which results in a 3.7 ns T2 time that we are relaxing to the 2v4 and then to the ground state

Page 25: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Conclusions

• We were able to show saturation with both CH4 and NO2

• With both species a homogenous and inhomogenous fit worked well for signal

• Only homogenous line shape fit the widths correctly

Page 26: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Future Work

• This technique could be applied to other similar molecules with similar strong lines such as CH3Cl and Propyne

• Also try to adjust the number of passes while keeping the amount of scattered light low– This could be done by putting the Perry cell on a

rotation stage– Also determine saturation by number of passes

instead of using polarizer to adjust power

Page 27: Saturation of the NO 2 ν 1 +ν 3 and the CH 4 ν 3 Transitions in Helium Nanodroplets Robert Fehnel Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry University of Virginia.

Acknowledgements

• Dr. Ozgur Birer who help construct the HENDI machine at UVa.

Funding:• National Science Foundation, UVa