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CHAPTER 3 Optical Components of Spectrometers BASIC OPTICAL RELATIONSHIPS The basic laws in optics include: • The conservation law, • The laws of reflection and refraction, • The absorption law The Conservation Law Basic principle of wave motion (conservation law ): • When a wave strikes a boundary between two media, a portion of the wave is reflected, a portion is absorbed, and a portion is transmitted into the new medium. • Spectral absorptance, () The fraction of the incident radiant energy lost by absorption at the interface or surface • Spectral reflectance, (), The fraction reflected at the interface or surface • Spectral transmittance, T() The fraction transmitted into the entered medium • The quantitative statement of the conservation law is () + () + T() = 1 Laws of reflection and refraction • Velocity of all electromagnetic waves in free space, c, depends upon the electric permittivity,and permeability, , of free space • Thus, c= 3 x 108 m s-1. • absolute index of refraction, The ratio of the speed of an electromagnetic wave in vacuum to that in matter Refers to space dielectric constant relative permeability • Dispersion: variation of refractive index of a medium with the wavelength of the incident radiation, • Media that are colorless and transparent have characteristic frequencies of oscillation (the natural frequencies of the atomic and molecular oscillators) in the ultraviolet region • Glasses, for example, may have characteristic oscillations at wavelengths near 100 nm. • For these materials, the refractive index increases as the radiation frequency approaches a natural oscillation frequency. This behavior is called Normal dispersion • For glass and visible wavelengths is typically about 1.5 • In a medium of refractive index > 1, a wave of frequency undergoes a reduction in wavelength compared to that in vacuum. • The wavelength in the medium is = v/ = c/ . • When a wave goes from a medium of refractive index 1 into a medium of refractive index 2 , the ratio of the wavelengths in the two media is given by 2/ 1 = 1/ 2 • The wavelength is thus smaller in the medium of higher refractive index. Snell’s law of refraction: • A ray bends toward the normal (2 < 1) when it enters a medium of higher refractive index (2 >1) and away from the normal when it enters a medium of lower refractive index. Reflection loss at interfaces • There are many cases in spectrochemical instruments where radiant energy must be transmitted across one or more interfaces separating dielectric media of different refractive indices. • For example, there are two air-glass interfaces to traverse when EMR is transmitted through a lens. • In a spectrophotometer cuvette filled with solution there are two air-glass interfaces and two glass-solution interfaces to traverse. • any radiation that is reflected at the interface will cause a loss in the radiant power transmitted into the new medium. Fresnel equation When the incident beam is monochromatic and normal to the interface, the reflectance () is given by Fresnel equation • The larger the difference in refractive indices, the larger the reflectance. • When 1 = 2, there is no reflection. • For an air-glass interface, where air = 1 and glass = 1.5, approximately 4% of the light incident perpendicular to the interface is reflected and 96% is transmitted unless an antireflection coating is applied • Fresnel complete equation • If a beam strikes the interface at an angle other than 90°, the reflectance varies with the angle of incidence according to the above eq. • Reflectance vs. angle of incidence for a monochromatic beam traveling from air into glass • Note that the reflectance changes only slightly up to an angle of 60° and then increases rapidly until it is 100% at grazing incidence (90°). Total internal Reflection • • Consider the transmission and reflection of radiation where the source is in a medium of refractive index 1 that is larger than the refractive index 2 of the transmission medium. Fresnel’s complete equation tells us that the transmitted radiant flux is a maximum when the incident beam is normal to the surface (1 = 0°) •The incident beam is in a medium of 1 greater than that of the transmission medium. • Hence the refracted beams bend away from the normal (a). • As the angle of incidence 1 becomes larger (b), the reflected beam grows stronger and the refracted beam grows weaker. • At angles of incidence equal to (c) or exceeding (d) the critical and angle c, the transmitted beam intensity goes to zero. Absorption Law • In the absorption process atoms or molecules in the medium are excited, and the energy absorbed can be dissipated as thermal energy, radiant energy (e.g., luminescence), or chemical energy (e.g., photochemical reactions). • The amount of radiation absorbed depends on the total number of absorbers that interact with the beam. • Thus, the amount of radiation absorbed depends on the thickness of the medium and the • Concentration of absorbing species Radiant flux - d db Thin slice of absorber Number of absorbers is thickness of the slice, db • Since number of absorbers is thickness of the slice, db Absorption coefficient Due to beam attenuation With increasing thickness • To obtain the absorption in a medium of finite thickness, b, the above eq. is rearranged and integrated from zero thickness where the incident flux 0 to thikness b where the transmitted flux is • The absorption coefficient, k, magnitude depends on the of the incident radiation, the nature of the absorber, and the concentration of the absorber. • In atomic spectroscopy, the absorption law is most often used in the form shown in the above eq. where k is conc. dependent • In molecular spectroscopy, it is common to state explicitly the concentration dependence of the absorption coefficient by expressing k as k = k'c, where k' is a new absorption coefficient independent of concentration. • Thus equation becomes • • Most often in absorption spectroscopy we measure the transmittance: T = (/0)° or the absorbance A = -log T. Thus a : absorptivity of the absorbing species When con. of absorber is expressed in M, a will be changed to which would be called molar absorptivity. Thus the absorption law is , A = bc • The absorption characteristics must be carefully considered in spectrochemical applications. • The absorption coefficient should be small enough that attenuation by the material is slight. • In the UV region quartz (natural silica) or synthetic silica is used. • Glass is used in the region 320 nm to 2 m, while halide salts are employed in the infrared and vacuum UV region. Assumptions of the absorption law: • The incident radiation is monochromatic. • The absorbers (molecules, atoms, ions, etc.) act independently of each other. • The incident radiation consists of parallel rays, perpendicular to the surface of the absorbing medium. • The path length traversed is uniform over the cross section of the beam. (All rays traverse an equal distance of the absorbing medium.) • The absorbing medium is homogeneous and does not scatter the radiation. • The incident flux is not large enough to cause saturation effects. (Lasers can cause such effects, as discussed later) INTERFERENCE, DIFFRACTION,AND POLARIZATION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES • The phenomena of interference, diffraction, and polarization all deal with what occurs when two or more electromagnetic waves overlap at some point in space. Superposition of Waves • Superposition of sinusoidal waves. • In (a) the two constituent waves E1, and E2 are in phase and add to produce a larger amplitude resultant. • In (b) the two waves are 180° out of phase and add to produce a smaller-amplitude resultant. • Note in both cases that the combination wave is of the same frequency as the constituent waves. M = 0, 1, 2, and so on • Constructive interference occurs when the optical path length difference is an integral multiple of the wavelength. • Destructive interference occurs when (OPL) = (2m + 1)0/2. Interference • optical interference is the interaction of light waves to yield a resultant irradiance that is different from the sum of the component values, as predicted by the principle of superposition of waves. • Two waves for which the initial phase difference is zero or constant for a long time are said to be coherent. • Waves emitted by separate sources are incoherent with respect to one another • Conditions for interference 1. The light reaching the point of interference comes from a single source by two different paths. 2. The interfering waves have very nearly the same frequency composition. This again is readily achieved if the radiation comes from a single source. 3. Normal unpolarized light also produces interference Diffraction • Diffraction is the deviation of light from rectilinear propagation when it encounters an obstacle. (A parallel beam is bent as it passes by a sharp barrier or through a narrow opening) • Thus, a parallel beam tend to spread slightly on passage trough a narrow slit • Waves of EMR always spread to some extent into the region which is not directly exposed to the incoming waves • The distinction between diffraction and interference is somewhat arbitrary since diffraction can also result in the superposition of waves. • Interference is usually considered to be the superposition of only a few waves, whereas diffraction is considered to be that of a large number of waves. • This optical phenomena can be explained by assuming that radiation waves move through space in a linear wavefront • Each point on the wavefront can be regarded as a new source of waves called wavelets • Thus secondary wavelets are propagated in all directions with the velocity of the original wavefront. • This principle (Huygens) in conjunction with the phenomena of interference is used to explain the features of diffraction Diffraction by a slit Fraunhofer diffraction • The diffraction pattern observed on a plate or screen by a slit would be alternate light and dark bands called fringes • In the fig next slide the relative intensity of bands of light is represented as peaks • The central band has a maximum intensity at Po because the interference between wavelets from the slit is constructive for the direction directly ahead ( = 0) • However, destructive interference between wavelets causes intensity minima at points P1, P2, P3, …. Source is placed at long distance So rays are parallel single slit of width W • Rays from the slit that reach Po all have identical optical path lengths. • Since they are in phase in the plane of the slit, they are still in phase at Po and give rise to a central maximum of irradiance Fraunhofer diffraction by a single slit (a) parallel source rays illuminate the slit where diffraction occurs. Observation of the light at a large distance, or focused by a lens, yields a diffraction pattern. The diffraction is minimum at P1 • Consider two rays that reach P1 on the screen • The ray originating at the top of the slit must travel a distance x = (W/2) sin farther than the ray from the center of the slit. • According to earlier discussion, a destructive interference is expected when the pathlength difference is /2. • Thus a minimum irradiance occurs when: • (W/2) sin = /2 or W sin = •Other minima can be located by dividing the slit into four parts as shown above. •Thus, any two adjacent rays will destructively interfere when (W/4) sin = /2 or W sin = 2 . •By extension, the general formula for diffraction minima is Optimum slit width • To achieve maximum advantage of a prism or grating for separating a mixture of radiation into its component wavelengths, the entire side of the prism or length of the grating should be illuminated • There will be an optimum slit width that will just allow the central (maximum-intensity) band to be focused on the entire length of prism or grating • This eq.: W sin = • When W becomes too narrow, the edges of the central band will miss the prism or grating and be wasted • If W is too wide maximum use of prism or grating will not be made since the dark regions adjacent to the central ban will also be focused on the dispersion Distance between device. The optimum slit width can be calculated from slit and Width of grating or prism To be illuminated Wopt 2d b grating or prism • • • • • • • • When m = 1, sin = /W. As W decreases, increases, and the beam spreads. If we consider angle to be small, then /W. The angular half-width (width at half maximum intensity) of the beam in this case is said to be diffraction limited. The width cannot be reduced to zero unless W is infinite or is zero. The total beam half-width W' after the beam travels a distance b is approximately its original width W plus b times the angular width /W. For large enough b, we can neglect the original width and W' b /W. A plot of the irradiance of a diffraction-limited beam upon striking a screen is shown in the Figure • Fraunhofer diffraction at a single slit. • The angular half-width is /W. • The irradiance of the second maximum is about 4.4% of that of the principal or central maximum. Multiple slit diffraction • As the number of slits increases, each diffraction maximum grows in irradiance and becomes narrower. • The narrowing occurs because with multiple slits only a slight change in angle away from that corresponding to a maximum leads to almost total destructive interference. • Diffraction gratings can be considered to consist of many closely spaced slits. Such gratings are considered in detail later Multiple-slit diffraction from six slits separated by distance d • The difference in OPL between adjacent rays is x = d sin , where d is the distance between slits. • Maxima in irradiance occur when this distance is an integral multiple of the wavelength or d sin = m m = 0, ±1, ±2, …… Plane polarized light • In practice most EMR is unpolarized i.e., has electric and magnetic vectors at all orientations perpendicular to the direction of propagation • The infinite number of vibrational planes are resolved into two major planes by vector addition • When the amplitude of the vectors becomes unsymmetrical, the radiation is polarized and the elimination of all but one plane results in plane polarization. • Thus, plane polarized means that electric field vector vibrates in a single plane and the magnetic field vibrates in another plane perpendicular to the electric field Polarization of Light • consider what occurs when we have two plane-polarized light waves of identical frequency moving through the same region of space in the same direction. • If the electric field vectors of the two waves are aligned with each other, they will simply combine to give a resultant wave that is also linearly polarized. • The amplitude and phase of the resultant depends, on the amplitude and phase of the two superimposing waves. • If the electric field vectors of the waves are mutually perpendicular, the resultant wave may or may not be linearly polarized. • If the waves are of equal amplitude and orthogonal, superposition can lead to plane-polarized, elliptically polarized, and circularly polarized radiation; – which of these is obtained depends on the phase difference between the two waves, as discussed below. Linear Polarization • Consider two waves with mutually perpendicular electric field vectors. • If the two waves have a phase difference that is zero or an integral multiple of ± 2, they are in phase, and the resultant wave is linearly polarized, as shown in the Figure linearly polarized light of resultant amplitude E is seen to be composed of two orthogonal components. The component with amplitude Ey is polarized in the yz plane, while that with amplitude Ex is polarized in the xz plane. The z axis is the axis of propagation Circular Polarization • It arises when the two orthogonal waves are 90° out of phase. • In such a case a circularly polarized light is obtained because the resultant traces out a circle. • When the resultant vector (when the x component lags the y component by 90°) rotates clockwise, the resultant wave is said to be right circularly polarized. • If the x component were to lead the y component by 90°, the resultant electric field vector would rotate counterclockwise. The resultant in this case is said to be left circularly polarized. • The two oppositely polarized components are often called the l and d components, where d (right-handed or dextrorotatory) refers to clockwise rotation and l (left-handed or levorotatory) refers to counterclockwise rotation from • The two oppositely polarized components are often called the l and d components, where d (right-handed or dextrorotatory) refers to clockwise rotation and l (left-handed or levorotatory) refers to counterclockwise rotation Elliptical Polarization • If the two superimposing, plane-polarized waves have a phase difference between 0° (linear polarization) and 90° (circular polarization), the resultant traces out an ellipse and the radiation is said to be elliptically polarized. Normal Light • Light from common sources (filament lamps, the sun, arc lamps) is emitted by nearly independent radiators (atoms and molecules). • Each radiator produces a polarized wave train for a short time ( = 10-8 s). • The light propagating in a given direction consists of many such wave trains whose planes of vibration are randomly oriented around the direction of propagation. • As a result of the random superposition of independent polarized wave trains, no single resultant state of polarization is observable, and natural light is referred to as unpolarized light. • Unpolarized light can be described as two orthogonal plane-polarized waves of equal amplitude with a phase difference between them that varies randomly in time. Optical Rotatory Dispersion • For some substances, the characteristics of optical phenomena such as absorption, refraction, and reflection depend on the polarization of the incident radiation. • Substances that rotate the plane of vibration of plane-polarized radiation are termed optically active. • These include anisotropic crystals and liquids or solutes in solution that can exist as enantiomers (e.g., chiral molecules). • In the latter case, optical activity is observed if one of the enantiomers is in excess. • The rotation of plane polarized light by an optically active substance can be viewed as being due to the different propagation rates of the d and l components • The propagation velocities differ because of the different refractive indicies for the d and l components, d and l,, respectively. • The rotation in degrees (), also termed the optical rotatory power, is given by pathlength wavelength of incident radiation • The rotatory power depends not only on the compound, wavelength, and pathlength, but also on the temperature, and for solutions of an optically active solute, the solvent and the analyte concentration. • The rotation can be normalized to a particular pathlength and concentration as follows: Specific rotation g/mL decimeters For pure liquids, c is Replaced by the density Polarimetry • The rotation is measured at one wavelength. • The temperature and wavelength are commonly specified by adding a superscript and subscript to . • Standard wavelengths include 589 nm (the Na D(3-26) line) and 546.1 nm (the green Hg line). • In spectropolarimetry, the dependence of the rotation on wavelength is measured and is termed Optical rotatory dispersion Circular Dichroism • • • • • • • • (CD) depends on the difference in molar absorptivities for the d and l components, d and l, respectively, by optically active materials. If an absorbing sample of an optically active compound is illuminated with planepolarized radiation, the differential absorption results in one of the circularly polarized components being absorbed more strongly than the other component Thus the transmitted radiation is elliptically polarized. The eccentricity of the ellipse can be characterized by a quantity termed the ellipticity () in degrees. () is a measure of the magnitude of CD and is related to the length of the major and minor axes of the ellipse The ellipticity cannot be directly measured as the optical rotation. Rather the absorbance with incident radiation that is circularly polarized in the d direction (Ad) and the absorbance with l circularly polarized radiation (Al) are separately measured. The ellipticity is calculated from these absorbances and the equation It applies if c is in M units And b in decimeters Units are often in degrees centimeter squared Per decimole Circular dichroism • A circular dichroism curve or spectrum is a plot of molar elipticity vs wavelength Modulators • Devices used to amplitude modulate a radiation source • Modulation is based on mechanical interruption of a light beam or on electro-optic, magneto-optic, or acousto-optic phenomena. • A rotating wheel or disk chopper (often called a toothed wheel chopper) is usually used. • A high-quality motor is used to control the rotation rate of the wheel. • The periodic interruption of the light beam can also be controlled by other means Mechanical choppers • The maximum modulation frequency from a mechanical chopper is generally in the range 1 to 10 kHz. • Other choppers are designed to operate at one frequency (10 to 6000 Hz). • Choppers can be used for specialized functions by mounting mirrors, refractor plates, gratings, or filters to the vanes. • A chopper with mirrored vanes is commonly used as a chopping beam splitter, as discussed • In some applications, it is only necessary to block or unblock a radiation beam at certain times in an experiment (e.g., to measure the dark signal). • Beam blocking can be accomplished by pulling a vane in an out of the light path Imaging and beam directing optics • They produce an image or set of images of the entrance slit on focal plane • Collect and focus radiation from external source onto sample container and radiation from container into filter or entrance slit of a monochromator • Lenses and mirrors are usually used for these purposes Chromatic Aberrations • As mentioned earlier, the refractive index of a given material is a function of the wavelength of the incident radiation. • Because lenses depend on refraction for their imaging properties, they suffer from chromatic aberrations. Front surface mirrors, which depend only on reflection, do not. • The equation for the focal length of a thin lens 1 1 1 ( 1)( ) f R1 R2 1 1 R = radius of curvature; 1f =( focal 1)( length ) f R R shows that the focal length is also a function of wavelength because is a function of wavelength. Consider, for example, fused silica, which has a refractive index of 1.469618 at = 404.7 nm and 1.458404 at = 589.0 nm. Since 1/f ( - 1), the focal length of a fused silica lens will be 2.4% longer at 589.0 nm than at 404.7 nm. Thus in general f decreases with decreasing wavelength. Chromatic aberrations can be a particular problem if an optical system is aligned and optimized using visible light and the system is later used in the ultraviolet region. Dramatic effects on the size and quality of images and on the throughput can result. 1 • • • • • 2 • Chromatic aberrations along the optical axis are termed axial chromatic aberrations, while in the vertical direction they are termed lateral chromatic aberrations. • As a result of aberrations, a lens illuminated with white light fills a volume of space with a continuum of overlapping images that vary in size and color. • Chromatic aberrations can be compensated at two wavelengths by using a combination of a positive and a negative lens, called an achromatic doublet • Unfortunately, achromatic lenses are expensive and impractical in the ultraviolet region of the spectrum. • Compensation at one wavelength in the red and another in the blue, for example, is achieved by selecting glasses of appropriate refractive indices and choosing their radii of curvature to give the same f at the two wavelengths. Monochromatic Aberrations • Both lenses and mirrors suffer from aberrations even when the incident light is monochromatic. • Spherical aberrations are a result of deviations from the paraxial approximation. • For converging elements, off-axis rays are focused closer to the element than paraxial rays, as demonstrated in the Figure. • One method to reduce spherical aberrations is to put an aperture stop in front of or behind the lens so that off-axis rays are blocked. • Deviations are also reduced if the lens is used as illustrated in the Figure. • Image quality is improved through reduction of spherical aberrations by use of a spherical optical components. • Concave parabolic, ellipsoidal, and hyperboloidal mirrors form perfect images for pairs of conjugate axial points. Spherical aberrations (a) parallel rays are seen to produce a circle in the focal plane, called the circle of least confusion, due to spherical aberrations. (b) Deviations are reduced if the incident rays makes nearly the same angle with the surface as the exiting ray as shown in Beam Splitters • Many applications in spectroscopy call for one beam to be split into two beams; the doublebeam spectrometer is one example. • Devices that accomplish this task are called beam splitters. • They are available in many different forms for various applications. • One simple beam sputter is based on a partially silvered mirror as shown in Figure 3-31a. They are usu- Partially silvered mirror beam splitter • This type of mirror is partially transparent because the metallic coating is too thin to make it opaque. • With such a mirror, one can both look through it and see a reflection simultaneously • Beam is split into two beams separated spatially but temporarily overlapping Pellicle beam splitter These are made from very thin nitrocellulose membranes stretched over a metallic frame Chopper/beam splitter • The chopper wheel consists of alternating transmitting and reflecting segments. • The transmitting segments are just open slots, while mirrored surfaces form the reflecting segments. • The reflected and transmitted beams are temporally separated as shown. • it is used to split a beam into two spatially separated beams at different times Fiber Optics • Used in spectrophotometers to transfer light between various points • This fiber optic consists of a core of 1 and a clad of 2 where 1 > 2 • Usually additional jackets are used to provide additional strength • Total internal reflection occurs when Light ray entering the core • Maximum value of 0 for which total internal reflection occurs is given by 0 sin 0 = (12- 22 )1/2 • Rays incident at larger angles are only partially reflected at core-clad interface and soon pass out of the fiber • Numerical aperture (NA) is the cone of light accepted by the fiber Fiber optics are used in spectroscopy because: • Mechanically flexible • Light can be transmitted over curved paths • Thus, it replaces several mirrors in directing light rays in a spectrophotometer (source to monochromator and then detector, etc.) • Light can be transmitted over long distance (e.g. 500 m) that allows remote monitoring in hazardous environment since the more delicate components can be far from the monitoring site • A single fiber optic cannot transmit an image because the rays from different parts of the object are scrambled by multiple internal reflections • Filters, Prisms and Gratings • Filters attenuate all but the desired wavelength • Higher resolution systems work on the basis of dispersing (spreading out the wavelength spatially) radiation into a spectrum. Filters • Filters are used to pass a band of wavelengths (bandpass filters) or to block wavelengths longer or shorter than some desired value (cutoff filters) 1. Absorption filters – Based on absorption by colored glass, crystal, solutions and thin films – They are cheap and inactive to the angle of incidence Bandpass filter Maximum transmittance Full width at half maximumheight of maximum transmittance Cutoff filter short wavelength cutoff It contains a substance that absorb all radiation shorter than the given Cutoff (short wavelength cutoff) or All radiation at long wavelengths (long wavelength cutoff) 2. Interference filters • They are constructed so that the rays from most wavelengths that strike the filter suffer destructive interference while only rays within small wavelength band experience constructive interference and are passed • Two main types are used: – Single layer or Fabry-Perot type – Multilayer dielectric type Fabry-Perot type Material of low CaF2 • Ray 1 travels the path , while ray 2 travels the path • The two waves will be in phase (constructive interference) at points g and e if (OPL) is an integral multiple of the wavelength. Thus the condition for constructive interference is • In many uses of interference filters, the incident beam is normal to the plane of the filter, instead of skewed as in the previous figure. • In these cases = 0°, so sin 0. • The central wavelength passed by the filter m can be written The order How do we obtain filters with variable central wavelengths? • For a given filter with fixed d and values, the central wavelength can be changed by changing the angle of incidence of the filter. • The new peak wavelength is related to the central wavelength at normal incidence by : • Angle tuning of interference filters is frequently employed when they serve as wavelength selection devices in dye laser cavities. • Filters are commercially available in which the d spacing varies along the length of the filter. • Such wedge filters are also available in circular styles in which d varies with the filter rotation. Transmission of a typical FabryPerot interference filter • The first-order band has m ~ 720 nm. Note that the second-order band (m = 360 nm) is narrower, with only slightly lower peak transmittance. The free spectral range is 360 nm for the first order. • An additional broadband filter or cutoff filter is frequently employed to isolate the order of interest; The range of wavelengths for which no overlap of adjacent orders occurs is called the free spectral range. Multilayer (or multicavity) filters • They are made with alternating layers of high- and low-refractive-index dielectrics • They can be considered to be two to six FabryPerot cavities cemented together. • The multilayer interference filter can achieve quite narrow FWHM values (<1 nm) with high peak transmittances (>50%). • Single and multicavity filters are available with peak transmittances in the UV to the IR. • Bandwidths (FWHM values) in the range 1 to 100 nm are readily available Prisms • In spectroscopy prisms are used to – change the direction of a beam, – to split an incident beam into two outgoing beams, – and to produce polarized light, – to disperse the incoming beam into a spectrum. Dispersing Prisms • Dispersion occurs in a prism primarily because of the wavelength dependence of the refractive index of the prism material. • A typical arrangement for dispersion with a prism is shown in the Figure. • The angle that a monochromatic refracted ray makes with the undeviated incident beam is called the deviation • The variation of the deviation with the wavelength ( d ) d is called the angular dispersion, Da • Da is composed of two factors: Da = d d = d d d d dispersion of the prism material; d d d d This factor varies only slightly With • Dispersion of light of two wavelengths by a prism of refractive index , • Collimated rays of wavelengths, 1 (red), 2 (blue) are refracted upon entering the prism material and upon exiting it Normal • prism materials show higher refractive indices at shorter wavelengths. Hence blue light of 2 is more highly refracted than the red light 1 Reflecting Prisms • Reflecting prisms are designed to change the direction of propagation of a beam, the orientation of the beam, or both. • At least one internal reflection takes place within the prism and there is no resulting dispersion. • Several examples of reflecting prisms, including a cube beam sputter, are shown Reflecting Prisms Diffraction Gratings • A diffraction grating is a plane or concave plate that is ruled with closely spaced grooves. • The grating acts like a multi slit source when collimated radiation strikes it Different wavelengths are diffracted and constructively interfere at different angles. • Gratings are either designed for transmission of the incident radiation or for reflection. • Modern spectrometers invariably use reflection gratings. Diffraction from a blazed reflection grating (a) the incident ray makes an angle with the grating normal N, while the diffracted ray makes an angle . The spacing between adjacent grooves is d, and the blaze angle is . The distance L is called the land. (b) two monochromatic rays are shown undergoing diffraction at an angle . Ray 1 travels a distance AC farther than ray 2 in reaching the grating surface and a distance AD farther than ray 2 on exiting the grating. • The condition for constructive interference is given by the grating formula: m = order of diffraction = 0, ±1, ±2, ±3, … • Consider polychromatic light striking a grating. • Within a given order of diffraction (other than the zero order) the various wavelengths are spatially dispersed because each wavelength undergoes constructive interference at a different diffraction angle. • For example, consider light composed of two wavelengths, 500 nm and 600 nm, striking a grating at an incident angle of 10°. If the grating has 1200 grooves per mm, the d spacing is d = 106 nm mm-1/1200 grooves mm-1= 833.3 nm/groove. • In the first order, the 600-nm radiation is diffracted at an angle: • for 500 nm radiation the corresponding first order diffraction angle is = 25.2o • For a given d spacing and angle of incidence, , the grating formula predicts that many wavelengths are observed at a given angle of diffraction , a phenomenon known as overlapping orders • With the grating discussed in the example above, the second order of 300 nm also occurs at a diffraction angle of 33.1°, as does the third order of 200 nm. • In fact, wavelengths , /2, /3, . . . , /m all appear at the same angle in different orders. • The free spectral range f represents the range of wavelengths from the source for which no overlap of adjacent orders occurs • for = 600 nm in the first order, the free spectral range is 600 nm/2 or 300 nm. Monochromators • Monochromators isolate a small wavelength band from a polychromatic source. • Monochromators consist of a dispersive element (prism or grating) and an image transfer system (entrance slit, mirrors or lenses, and exit slit). • Within the monochromator an image of the rectangular, or sometimes curved, entrance slit is transferred to the exit slit after dispersion of the wavelength components of the incident radiation. Czerny-Turner plane grating monochromator. S l i t s a r e • Slits are of fixed or changeable width • slit width from 1-10 mm • In most monochromators the exit slit has the same dimensions as the entrance slit so that it can be fully illuminated by the entrance slit image. • Many monochromators allow both slits to be adjusted in width simultaneously. Wavelength Selection • To change the wavelength selected by the monochromator, the dispersive element is rotated to bring a different wavelength band through the exit slit. • The following equation expresses the grating formula in terms of the experimental variables and • Let us assume that in the monochromator d = 833.3 nm, is fixed at 6.71° and the grating is operated in the first order. • The Table gives the grating rotation angle, the angular dispersion Da calculated from the equation, the linear and reciprocal linear dispersion and the values of and required to isolate 300-, 400-, and 500-nm radiation. Angular Dispersion of a prism Dispersion is breaking apart or separating a mixture of wavelengths into its component wavelengths • For a prism Angular dispersion for a grating Da is the angular dispersion Is the angle of incidence Dispersive characteristics • For a monochromator, the dispersion in the focal plane is of more interest. • The linear dispersion, Dl = dx/d tells how far apart in distance two wavelengths are separated in the focal plane. • The Figure illustrates how Dl is determined for a dispersion element illuminated by collimated radiation of wavelengths 1and 2. • For the configuration shown, the linear dispersion is given by Dl = fDa • where f is the focal length of the focusing element. • The linear dispersion Dl is expressed in units of mm nm-1 in the UV-visible region of the spectrum. • Most often it is the reciprocal linear dispersion Rd that is specified for a spectrometer. • The reciprocal linear dispersion represents the number of wavelength intervals (e.g., nm) contained in each interval of distance (e.g., mm) along the focal plane • For a prism monochromator the reciprocal linear dispersion is usually wavelength dependent because of the variation of Da with wavelength. • Some prism monochromator configurations provide dispersion that is wavelength independent. Spectral Bandpass and Slit Function • The spectral bandpass s (nm) is the half-width of the wavelength distribution passed by the exit slit. • Except at small slit widths, where aberrations and diffraction effects must be considered, the spectral bandpass is controlled by the monochromator dispersion and the slit width. • Under these conditions the spectral bandpass is equal to the geometric spectral bandpass sg, given by sg = Rd W • For a mononchromator with Rd =1 nm mm-1; a slit width of 100 m give a spectral bandpass of • Many monochromators have equal entrance and exit slit widths. • The slits determine the spectral profile of the output observed at the exit slit. • If we illuminate the entrance slit with monochromatic light, for example, the image transfer system produces a monochromatic image of the entrance slit in the plane of the exit slit (focal plane). • As we rotate the dispersion element, the entrance slit image is swept across the exit slit as illustrated in the Figure. • The resulting convolution of the entrance and exit slit images is a triangular shaped function called the slit function. Wavelength setting • Slit function Incident wavelength • Slit function of a monochromator with equal exit and entrance slits. • In (a) the slit function is shown as the convolution of the entrance and exit slit images. • For a broadband (continuum) source, the focal plane contains a distribution of overlapping slit images. • If the monochromator is fixed at a single wavelength 0, the five images shown in the Figure could represent the focal plane images from five different wavelengths out of the source spectrum. • Each wavelength is passed to a degree that depends on the overlap of its image with the exit slit. • Thus for a broadband source, t() represents the fractional transmission vs. wavelength of the continuum spectrum impingent on the focal plane. • From equation above the image of wavelength = o ± sg)/2 would overlap 50% with the exit slit and thus be transmitted 50% compared to the image with = o b) the slit function is shown as a function of wavelength ( Resolution • While the dispersion determines how far apart two wavelengths are separated linearly or angularly, • the resolution determines whether the separation can be distinguished. • In many cases the resolution is determined by the monochromator spectral bandpass. • If the slit width W is large enough that we can neglect aberrations and diffraction (s = sg), a scan of two closely spaced monochromatic lines of peak wavelengths 1 and 2 would appear as ideal • Clearly the two lines will be just separated if 2 - 1 = 2s • Thus the slit width limited resolution s is • If the monochromator wavelength control is adjusted to that 0 = 1 and the slit width has been adjusted so that /Rd , the image of 1 will be completely passed while that of 2 will be just at one side of the exit slit Resolving power • • The Resolving power is another way to express the ability to distinguish two wavelengths. The experimental resolving power of a monochromator is The average of two wavelengths to be resolved • Rexp = /smin The theoretical resolving power is Rth = / d d the diffraction limited slit width (the slit width equal to the half –width of the central maximum) • • If the monochromator is free of aberrations, the experimental resolving power at smin is equal to the theoretical value. Normally, monochromators are operated at slit widths considerably larger than the diffraction-limited width. Stray Radiation • Stray radiation or stray light in a monochromator is considered to be any radiation passed outside the interval o ± s where o is the wavelength setting and s is the spectral bandpass. • Stray radiation is usually specified as the percentage of the total radiation passing the exit slit at a given wavelength over a specified wavelength range. Thus Source radiant power Passed by the monochrom. Over o ± s • Stray radiation is very difficult to measure accurately because it depends on the wavelength, the spectral bandpass, and the type of source used. • There are many possible causes of stray radiation. For example, room light can leak into the monochromator or radiation can be reflected internally from walls, optics and baffles. Scattering from dust particles, and fluorescence from optical materials are also sources of stray radiation. An overlapping grating order, grating imperfections, and diffraction from slit edges can also produce stray radiation. • With gratings, some stray radiation appears at all wavelengths because there is not complete destructive interference between diffraction orders. • Stray radiation can be reduced in several ways • Good instrument design, including appropriate baffles to intercept various reflected and scattered rays, is one obvious way. • Holographic gratings provide much lower stray radiation factors than do ruled gratings. • Stray radiation figures can vary from 0.1% to 10-5°. Typical values are 10-3% for ruled gratings and 10-4% for holographic gratings. • Broad absorption filters are often employed in front of the entrance slit to narrow the source bandwidth. These can also serve as order-sorting filters. • Double monochromators or two monochromators in tandem can achieve extremely low stray radiation figures.