News Release

Optimized differential helmholtz photoacoustic cell ensures higher sensitivity detection

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Optimized Differential Helmholtz Photoacoustic Cell Ensures Higher Sensitivity Detection

image: (a) Sound pressure simulation result and (b) Schematic diagram of the light multiple reflection in the novel differential Helmholtz photoacoustic cell. view more 

Credit: LI Zhengang

A team from Anhui Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Hefei Institutes of Physical Science of Chinese Academy of Sciences developed a high-sensitivity differential Helmholtz photoacoustic cell and successfully applied it to methane detection.

Relevant research works were published in Optics Express and selected as the "Editor's Pick" article.

Photoacoustic spectroscopy is an indirect absorption spectroscopy technique, which obtains gas concentration through detecting the photoacoustic signal generated by the measured gas. Because of the advantages of high sensitivity, good selectivity, and zero background detection, photoacoustic spectroscopy is widely used in environmental monitoring, medical diagnosis, combustion analysis, power detection and other fields. However, the photoacoustic detection performance is easily affected by various kinds of noise, such as such as incoherent noises generated by gas flow noise and electronic noise, as well as coherent noises generated by the photoacoustic cell wall absorbing light energy. Currently, there are few reports on suppressing of coherent and incoherent noises simultaneously and enhancing of photoacoustic signals.

"Our research is based on the principle of photoacoustic detection," said Prof. FANG Yonghua, who led the team, "The cell has a special structure, which enables the light beam to be reflected multiple times on the gold-plated inner wall, and thus excites a higher photoacoustic signal."

As for the coherent noise that photoacoustic cell wall produced when absorbing light energy, they used wavelength modulation and second harmonic technology to suppress.

The differential properties of the photoacoustic cell also helped to suppress the incoherent noise. The photoacoustic cell was also simulated and optimized in detail, which further improved the replacement speed of the measured gas while achieving superior performances.

They tested it later in the methane gas detection experiment. The photoacoustic cell showed good linearity and sensitivity.

When the excitation light source was a low-power (6 mW) near-infrared (1653 nm) distributed feedback laser, the minimum detection limit of 177 ppb was achieved within 1 s detection time, and the corresponding normalized noise equivalent absorption coefficient was 4.1×10–10 cm–1WHZ–1/2. This was much more accurate than normalized noise equivalent absorption coefficients reported previously, which were about 10–8 to 10–10 order.


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