R. Bruce Weisman, Tonya Cherukuri, Sergei M. Bachilo, Wei Meng, Satish Nagarajaiah
{"title":"(特邀)先进碳纳米管荧光光谱法的新应用","authors":"R. Bruce Weisman, Tonya Cherukuri, Sergei M. Bachilo, Wei Meng, Satish Nagarajaiah","doi":"10.1149/ma2023-01101181mtgabs","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Instrumental advances in near-IR fluorescence spectroscopy are enabling new types of measurements involving single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs). Two unique systems will be described. The first is a two-dimensional fluorescence-detected circular dichroism (FDCD) spectrometer. In this, SWCNT samples are excited by a spectrally selected supercontinuum laser beam that is switched between left- and right-circular polarization in an electro-optic modulator. Near-infrared sample fluorescence emitted in the backward direction is captured and directed to a scanning monochromator with a cooled InGaAs single-channel detector. After amplification and high precision digitization, the modulated signal component is extracted by computer-based phase sensitive detection. The system can measure a sample’s E 22 circular dichroism in four spectral modes: 1) conventional FDCD, with scanned visible excitation wavelength and spectrally integrated (zero-order grating) emission detection; 2) Emission-specific FDCD, with scanned visible excitation wavelengths and selected emission wavelength; 3) Emission-scanned FDCD, with selected visible excitation wavelength and scanned emission wavelengths; 4) Excitation-Emission FDCD, with excitation and emission wavelengths both scanned to give two-dimensional data sets. This instrument can spectroscopically resolve enantiomer signals from a single ( n , m ) species in a racemic SWCNT sample. In a parallel project, developments in SWCNT fluorescence spectrometry are advancing nanotube-based strain measurement technology toward commercialization. Because SWCNT emission wavelengths vary systematically with axial strain, nanotubes in a thin coating on a specimen can serve as optically interrogated strain gauges. We apply this effect to measure strain maps through hyperspectral imaging of SWCNT fluorescence. A rotated band pass filter is used to capture a set of images in multiple spectral slices, from which a custom computer program deduces strain at each of ~10 5 image pixels and compiles strain maps. We will describe how this apparatus has evolved from a lab prototype into a compact portable system that can make measurements in industrial settings.","PeriodicalId":11461,"journal":{"name":"ECS Meeting Abstracts","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"(Invited) Advanced Carbon Nanotube Fluorescence Spectrometry for Novel Applications\",\"authors\":\"R. Bruce Weisman, Tonya Cherukuri, Sergei M. Bachilo, Wei Meng, Satish Nagarajaiah\",\"doi\":\"10.1149/ma2023-01101181mtgabs\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Instrumental advances in near-IR fluorescence spectroscopy are enabling new types of measurements involving single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs). Two unique systems will be described. The first is a two-dimensional fluorescence-detected circular dichroism (FDCD) spectrometer. In this, SWCNT samples are excited by a spectrally selected supercontinuum laser beam that is switched between left- and right-circular polarization in an electro-optic modulator. Near-infrared sample fluorescence emitted in the backward direction is captured and directed to a scanning monochromator with a cooled InGaAs single-channel detector. After amplification and high precision digitization, the modulated signal component is extracted by computer-based phase sensitive detection. The system can measure a sample’s E 22 circular dichroism in four spectral modes: 1) conventional FDCD, with scanned visible excitation wavelength and spectrally integrated (zero-order grating) emission detection; 2) Emission-specific FDCD, with scanned visible excitation wavelengths and selected emission wavelength; 3) Emission-scanned FDCD, with selected visible excitation wavelength and scanned emission wavelengths; 4) Excitation-Emission FDCD, with excitation and emission wavelengths both scanned to give two-dimensional data sets. This instrument can spectroscopically resolve enantiomer signals from a single ( n , m ) species in a racemic SWCNT sample. In a parallel project, developments in SWCNT fluorescence spectrometry are advancing nanotube-based strain measurement technology toward commercialization. Because SWCNT emission wavelengths vary systematically with axial strain, nanotubes in a thin coating on a specimen can serve as optically interrogated strain gauges. We apply this effect to measure strain maps through hyperspectral imaging of SWCNT fluorescence. A rotated band pass filter is used to capture a set of images in multiple spectral slices, from which a custom computer program deduces strain at each of ~10 5 image pixels and compiles strain maps. 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(Invited) Advanced Carbon Nanotube Fluorescence Spectrometry for Novel Applications
Instrumental advances in near-IR fluorescence spectroscopy are enabling new types of measurements involving single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs). Two unique systems will be described. The first is a two-dimensional fluorescence-detected circular dichroism (FDCD) spectrometer. In this, SWCNT samples are excited by a spectrally selected supercontinuum laser beam that is switched between left- and right-circular polarization in an electro-optic modulator. Near-infrared sample fluorescence emitted in the backward direction is captured and directed to a scanning monochromator with a cooled InGaAs single-channel detector. After amplification and high precision digitization, the modulated signal component is extracted by computer-based phase sensitive detection. The system can measure a sample’s E 22 circular dichroism in four spectral modes: 1) conventional FDCD, with scanned visible excitation wavelength and spectrally integrated (zero-order grating) emission detection; 2) Emission-specific FDCD, with scanned visible excitation wavelengths and selected emission wavelength; 3) Emission-scanned FDCD, with selected visible excitation wavelength and scanned emission wavelengths; 4) Excitation-Emission FDCD, with excitation and emission wavelengths both scanned to give two-dimensional data sets. This instrument can spectroscopically resolve enantiomer signals from a single ( n , m ) species in a racemic SWCNT sample. In a parallel project, developments in SWCNT fluorescence spectrometry are advancing nanotube-based strain measurement technology toward commercialization. Because SWCNT emission wavelengths vary systematically with axial strain, nanotubes in a thin coating on a specimen can serve as optically interrogated strain gauges. We apply this effect to measure strain maps through hyperspectral imaging of SWCNT fluorescence. A rotated band pass filter is used to capture a set of images in multiple spectral slices, from which a custom computer program deduces strain at each of ~10 5 image pixels and compiles strain maps. We will describe how this apparatus has evolved from a lab prototype into a compact portable system that can make measurements in industrial settings.