Chirped Pulse Spectrometer Operating at 200 GHz
Abstract
The combination of electronic sources operating at high frequencies and modern microwave instrumentation has enabled the recent development of chirped pulse spectrometers for the millimetre and THz bands. This type of instrument can operate at high resolution which is particularly suited to gas-phase rotational spectroscopy. The construction of a chirped pulse spectrometer operating at 200 GHz is described in detail while attention is paid to the phase stability and the data accumulation over many cycles. Validation using carbonyl sulphide has allowed the detection limit of the instrument to be established as function of the accumulation. A large number of OCS transitions were identified using a 10-GHz chirped pulse and include the six most abundant isotopologues, the weakest line corresponding to the fundamental R(17) transition of 16O13C33S with a line strength of 4.3 × 10-26 cm-1/(molecule cm-2). The linearity of the system response for different degrees of data accumulation and transition line strength was confirmed over four orders of magnitudes. A simple analysis of the time-domain data was demonstrated to provide the line-broadening coefficient without the need for conversion by a Fourier transform. Finally, the pulse duration is discussed and optimal values are given for both Doppler-limited and collisional regimes.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves
- Pub Date:
- January 2018
- DOI:
- 10.1007/s10762-017-0445-3
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1810.04895
- Bibcode:
- 2018JIMTW..39..105H
- Keywords:
-
- Chirped pulse;
- Sub-millimetre;
- Terahertz;
- High-resolution spectroscopy;
- Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors
- E-Print:
- Journal of Infrared, Millimeter and Terahertz Waves, Springer Verlag, 2018, 39 (1), pp.105 - 119