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Nuclear Spin Optical Rotation in Organic Liquids Junhui Shi A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of Princeton University in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Recommended for Acceptance by the Department of Chemistry Adviser: Michael Romalis November 2013 UMI Number: 3604505 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. UMI 3604505 Published by ProQuest LLC (2013). Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, MI 48106 - 1346 © Copyright by Junhui Shi, 2013. All rights reserved. Abstract Nuclear spin induced optical rotation (NSOR) is a novel technique for the detection of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) via optical rotation instead of conventional pick-up coil. Originating from hyperfine interactions between nuclei and orbital electrons, NSOR provides a new method to reveal nuclear chemical environments in different molecules. Previous experiments of NSOR detection have poor signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which limits the application of NSOR in chemistry. In this work, based on a continuous-wave NMR scheme at a low magnetic field (5 G), we employ a multipass cavity and a 405 nm laser to improve the sensitivity of NSOR. By performing precision measurements of NSOR detection in a range of pure liquid organic chemicals, we demonstrate the capability of NSOR to distinguish 1 H signals in different chemicals, in agreement with the first-principles quantum mechanical calculations. The NSOR of 19 F is also measured at low fields with high SNR, showing that heavy nuclei have higher optical rotation signals than light nuclei. In addition, in order to obtain NSOR at different chemical sites in the same molecule via chemical shift, we make efforts to develop a novel scheme based on liquid-core hollow fiber for the detection of NSOR under high magnetic fields. By coiling a long liquid-core fiber densely for many loops around a small rod combined with RF coils, it is possible to measure optical rotation signals inside a narrow-bore superconducting magnet. Manufactured by filling liquids into capillary tubings, those liquid-core fibers perform like multimode step-index fibers, and thereby exhibit linear birefringence and depolarization, significantly reducing the light polarization for the measurement of optical rotation. According to our attempts, it is possible to suppress the linear birefringence by filling chiral liquids in hollow fibers, and approach near single-mode operation by means of launching light beam into the fiber core under the mode match condition. Although some issues of hollow fibers obstruct the final iii measurement of high-frequency NSOR, our work on the liquid-core fiber provides the basis for future fiber-based NSOR experiments under high magnetic fields. iv Acknowledgements Without help and support from many people that I have worked with, it is impossible for me to finish this PhD thesis. First of all, I would like to thank my advisor Prof. Michael Romalis for his guidance and help during my past three years. Many times when I want to give up doing something after facing failures and frustration, his enthusiasm and insistence inspires me to continue on my work. When I just came to his lab, I almost had no real expertise on experimental atomic physics. I did not know the principle and operations of a Lock-in amplifier, why only one side coating is need in my experiment and how to solder electronic circuits properly... Without Mike’s patience and encouragement, hardly can I finish my experiments and this thesis. Here, I sincerely acknowledge Mike for his continuous guidance and support in these years. I also would like to address my thanks to Prof. William Happer. I benefit a lot from his kindly comments, interesting talks about scientific knowledge and invaluable memory of physics history, when we from Mike’s lab had group meeting together with his lab. In the past two years, I also utilized the superconducting magnet for my research and learned a lot in Will’s lab. In addition, I greatly acknowledge Prof. Juha Vaara for his elaborated theoretical calculation as assistance for our experimental measurements. His theoretical predictions could guide future work on the research topic in my thesis. Working in Mike’s lab, I received a lot of help from Justin Brown, Nezih Dural, Marc Smiciklas, Shuguang Li, Dong Sheng, Yunfan (Gerry) Zhang, Oliver Jeong. Justin’s prompt help, Nezih’s optimism, Marc’s continuous teaching, Shuguang’s carefulness, Dong’s passion for science ... all impress me a lot. There are too many times when they help me in the basement laboratory than I can remember in details, so I acknowledge all of them here. In addition, I also benefited a lot from Ben Olsen and Bart McGuyer from Will’s lab, as they taught me to fill and play with liquid nitrogen v and helium for the magnet. I am also grateful to Tom Kornack, Giorgos Vasilakis, Ioannis Kominis, Ekaterina (Katia) Mehnert, Haifeng Dong, Aaron Kabcenell, Dongwoo Chung, etc, who keep friendly atmosphere when they are working in Mike’s lab. All through my six years as a graduate student, I also need to acknowledge a lot people as collaborators and friends as follows. Prof. Herschel Rabitz at Princeton helped and guided my work in theoretical chemistry in the first two years. It is also a good opportunity to work with Prof. Feng Shuang at Institute of Intelligent Machines (Hefei) and Prof. Shian Zhang at East China Normal University, when I spend one year studying in these two places as a visiting student. Other people and friends that I have worked with or gotten help from include Tak-san Ho, Xiaojiang Feng, Rebing Wu, Vincent Beltrani at Princeton; Yaoxiong Wang, Xin Chen at IIM; Prof. Zhenrong Sun, Hui Zhang, Chenghui Lu, Wenjing Chen at ECNU. In addition, I need to acknowledge Prof. Steven Bernasek, Prof. Zoltan Soos and Prof. Annabella Selloni, as they serve as my committee. Also I specially acknowlege Megan Krause and Sallie Dunner, since they are graduate administrator and provide a lot of kindly help to assist my graduate study at Princeton. I am also indebted to Steven Lowe, Claudin Champagne, Darryl Johnson, Catherine Brosowsky, and other staff of the physics department, for their supports and assistance to ease my lab work. As to the financial support, here I should acknowledge Department of Chemistry, Princeton University and National Science Foundation. Finally, I need to thank my parents and grandparents. Nothing that I have accomplished would have been possible without them. Their supports and love are endless for me, no matter what difficult I need to face and what choice I will make in my life. vi To my parents and grandparents. vii Contents Abstract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v List of Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . x List of Figures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi 1 Introduction 1 2 Theory 9 2.1 Natural optical rotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 2.2 Faraday rotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 2.3 Nuclear spin induced optical rotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 3 Experiments under low magnetic fields 3.1 3.2 34 Experiment setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 3.1.1 Adiabatic passage transfer and CW spin-lock technique . . . . 39 3.1.2 Multipass optical cavity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 3.1.3 Cell configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 3.1.4 Coil arrangement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 3.1.5 Polarimetry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 NMR signal calculation, measurement and calibration . . . . . . . . . 54 3.2.1 Theoretical calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 3.2.2 NMR signal calibration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 viii 3.2.3 Polarization decay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 3.2.4 Measurement of NMR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 3.3 Optical rotation constant calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 3.4 Comparison of Signal-to-Noise ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 3.5 Faraday rotation (Verdet constant) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 4 Experimental results and calculations under low fields 73 4.1 NSOR of 1 H in various chemicals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.2 Comparison of F and 1 H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 4.3 Theoretical calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 19 5 NSOR experiments under high magnetic fields 5.1 5.2 5.3 73 89 Experiment setup at high fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 5.1.1 Experimental setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 5.1.2 Three types of hollow fibers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 5.1.3 Pulse sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 5.1.4 High bandwidth photodiode amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 Polarization in liquid core hollow fibers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 5.2.1 Multimode liquid core fiber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 5.2.2 Mode matching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 5.2.3 Bending induced birefringence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 5.2.4 Mode conversion and bandwidth of multimode fiber . . . . . . 130 Experiments with hollow fibers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136 5.3.1 Transmission increase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 5.3.2 Depolarization and linear birefringence . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140 5.3.3 Chiral liquids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 6 Conclusions 147 ix Bibliography 149 x List of Tables 2.1 Character table for group S1 and S2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2 Change of the magnetic quantum number ∆mF under absorption or 17 emission of photons. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 3.1 Parameters of this experiment about cell, coil and flow speed . . . . . 48 3.2 Verdet constant of chemicals from reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 3.3 Comparison of measured value and referenced value of Verdet constant 72 4.1 Physical properties of chemicals for investigation . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 4.2 Original measured data of NSOR angles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.3 Measured NSOR, Faraday rotation Verdet constants and reference value of Verdet constants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 4.4 Calculations of NSOR constants via HF, DFT and CCSD methods . . 87 5.1 The cutoff frequency Um for mode HE2m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 xi List of Figures 1.1 Relative NMR receptivities of magnetic nuclei in traditional NMR detections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.2 First-principle calculations of Nuclear spin induced optical rotation of 1 2.1 2 H, 13 C, 17 O, 14 N and 15 N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Rotation of electric field vector of a right-circularly polarized light beam. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 2.2 The composition of left- and right-circular polarization light . . . . . 13 2.3 Enantiomers of Lactic acid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 2.4 The dispersion of optical rotation near absorption lines . . . . . . . . 18 2.5 Polarization rotation due to the Faraday effect . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 2.6 Zeeman splitting and magnetic field induced optical rotation. 22 2.7 Refractive indices difference of n+ and n− as a function of light frequency. 25 2.8 Measurement scheme of Faraday rotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.9 Distant magnetic field and hyperfine interaction induced by a nuclear . . . . 28 spin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 2.10 Energy shifts due to hyperfine interaction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 2.11 Measurement scheme of Nuclear spin induced optical rotation . . . . 33 3.1 Optical absorption coefficients for water from reference . . . . . . . . 35 3.2 Apparatus for measurement of NSOR in organic liquids . . . . . . . . 38 xii 3.3 Polarized liquid flow and adiabatic passage transfer . . . . . . . . . . 41 3.4 Cylindrical-cylindrical mirror cell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 3.5 Geometry of multipass cell and the light spot patterns . . . . . . . . 45 3.6 Two multipass optical pattern in this work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 3.7 Illustration of a multipass cavity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 3.8 Picture of sample tube (cell) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 3.9 Drawing of the sample tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 3.10 Configurations of B0 and B1 coil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 3.11 Calculated B0 and B0 field distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 3.12 Polarimetry for the analysis of polarization rotation angle . . . . . . . 53 3.13 Circuit of two-channel photodiode amplifier with differential output . 55 3.14 Distribution of the magnetic field induced by the nuclear magnetization along the sample tube . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 3.15 Polarization decay of 1 H in water . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 3.16 On-resonance NMR signal in time and frequency domain . . . . . . . 63 3.17 Off-resonance NMR signal in time and frequency domain . . . . . . . 64 3.18 NMR signal at different supply current I0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 3.19 Dependence of NMR signal and linewidth on RF voltage . . . . . . . 65 3.20 NMR signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 3.21 Comparison of NMR and Optical rotation signal spectrum for water . 67 3.22 Comparison of signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio between the traditional NMR signal and optical rotation signal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 3.23 Apparatus for Faraday rotation measurement . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 4.1 1 H NSOR constants in various chemicals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 4.2 Calculated NSOR constant of individual 1 H in different groups . . . . 81 4.3 NSOR spectrum of 1 H in C6 H14 and 83 xiii 19 F in C6 F14 . . . . . . . . . . . 4.4 Comparison of first-principle calculations and experimental results of NSOR constants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 5.1 High-field experiment setup with hollow fibers and RF coil . . . . . . 94 5.2 The NMR RF coil and tank circuit in the magnet . . . . . . . . . . . 96 5.3 Toroid coil used for both NSOR and Faraday rotation measurements 97 5.4 Schematic drawing of the fiber connector and liquid port . . . . . . . 99 5.5 Picture of the fiber connector and liquid port . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 5.6 Inject laser beam into the liquid core fiber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 5.7 Photonic crystal fiber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 5.8 Flexible capillary tubings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 5.9 NMR spectrum of Toluene, measured by a toroid coil. . . . . . . . . . 106 5.10 CPMG sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 5.11 The performance of CPMG sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 5.12 The long-time performance of CPMG pulse sequence . . . . . . . . . 109 5.13 The model of photodiode and the circuit for photodiode amplifier . . 110 5.14 Picture of the high bandwidth photodiode amplifier . . . . . . . . . . 111 5.15 The model of liquid core hollow fiber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 5.16 The choices of the normalized propagation constant b . . . . . . . . . 116 5.17 b − V characteristics of weakly guiding fibers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 5.18 Axial intensity distribution of LPlm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 5.19 Mode excitation efficiency versus w1 /a . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 5.20 A bent liquid core fiber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124 5.21 Periodic polarization transformation in a linear birefringent fiber . . . 127 5.22 Right-angle 8-configuration and Faraday rotator mirror . . . . . . . . 130 5.23 Dispersion of a multimode fiber. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 5.24 The frequency spectrum of impulse response h(t) . . . . . . . . . . . 136 5.25 Transmission increment in 5m-long hollow fiber . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 xiv 5.26 Transmission drop when the liquid is flowing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140 5.27 The comparison of transmission in a fresh fiber and a reused fiber . . 141 5.28 Measurement of polarization linearity of the light emerging from the liquid core fiber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 5.29 Output light intensity from two channels after periodically modulated by a rotating λ/2 waveplate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143 5.30 The measurement of Faraday rotation in a long coiled fiber at low frequency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 xv Chapter 1 Introduction Background As developed for more than half a century, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is one of the most important spectroscopy tools for the chemical analysis of materials. For many years, people use a pick-up coil to receive the oscillating induced voltage arising from the precessing nuclei under a magnetic field [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. With help of pulsed excitation and Fourier transform technique, highly-sensitive and multidimensional NMR is extensively applied to many research areas [6, 7]. In the pick-up coil scheme, the sensitivity of NMR is proportional to the natural abundance and the square of gyromagnetic ratio of the nuclei (see the comparison of relative receptivities in Figure 1.1), therefore the conventional NMR favors the nucleus 1 H, and normally requires a high magnetic field and bulk volume. In order to overcome these limitations, spectroscopists developed a lot of substitutional methods to improve the technology of NMR. For example, high sensitivity magnetometer are applied to sense NMR signal instead of pick-up coil, which making the signal strength proportional only to the first power of magnetic field [8, 9, 10]; Optical pumping is implemented to approach hyperpolarization by transferring angular momentum from photons to the spins and 1 C Figure 1.1: Relative NMR receptivities (D ) of spin- 12 nuclei in traditional continuousC wave (CW) NMR detections based on pick-up coil. D is a relative value compared C with 13 C, and D is proportional to γ 3 N I(I + 1) for continuous-wave experiments using optimum radio frequency powers. (γ is the gyromagnetic ratio, N is natural abundance of the isotopic species concerned, and I is the spin quantum number.) Adapted from Reference [24]. then increase the spin polarization via nuclei-electron or nuclei-nuclei spin exchange in condensed matter systems [11, 12, 13, 14] and noble gases [15, 16, 17, 18]. In the small structured quantum well and nanomaterial, an additional increase in sensitivity is obtained by optical detection of the photoluminescence polarization arising from the recombination of electrons [19, 20, 21, 22, 23]. Recently, unlike preceding optical detection methods confined in some specific systems, a more general optical detection scheme for transparent substance based on nuclear spin induced optical rotation (NSOR) is proposed and demonstrated by Savukov et al [25], while previous efforts on shifting NMR frequency via light turns out to be too small to be detected as far [26, 27, 28]. The first NSOR experiment is carried out by continuous-wave spin-lock method under a low magnetic field with prepolarized water and 129 Xe, which shows that rotation of light polarization via 2 nuclear spin precession is pretty small in 1 H in water, but could be enhanced dramatically in samples containing heavy nuclei, e.g. 129 Xe [25]. Subsequent experiments under high magnetic field demonstrate the chemical-shift-resolved NMR spectrum via NSOR with aid of pulsed NMR technique [29, 30]. In the pulsed NMR experiments under high fields in Reference [30], a comparison of traditional NMR (inductive) and NSOR (optical) of 1 H, 13 C, 19 F and 31 P is investigated, showing different NSOR receptivities of light and heavy nuclei from traditional NMR receptivities. Besides experiments, formal theories for NSOR are also developed [31, 32, 33], as well as elaborated first-principle calculations based on ab-initio and density functional methods [34, 35]. Especially, the first-principle calculations of NSOR [34] predicts that different molecules and groups containing the same nuclei have different optical rotation constants. As plotted in Figure 1.2, the first-principle calculations of H, C, O and N, all of which are most important nuclei in organic chemistry, show differences between NSOR constants in different groups of molecules, paving the way to explore potential applications of NSOR in chemical analysis. NSOR essentially originates from the hyperfine interaction between nuclei and orbital electrons in atoms and molecules [25], as the magnetic field arising from a precessing nucleus could induce optical rotation in the medium. The magnetic field arising from the a nuclear spin is composed of a local contact field and a distant dipolar field. The local contact field is only effectively exerted on the orbital electrons in the same atom, known as hyperfine interactions inside atoms and molecules, resulting in sensitivity in terms of nuclei-electron configuration, while the a distant dipolar field is much weaker and will be averaged as a macroscopic magnetic field in a bulk polarized medium. As regular Faraday rotation is induced by a macroscopic magnetic field (i.e. distant field) when the field is align with the light propagation direction in the medium, the hyperfine interaction could enhance the Faraday rotation as an 3 Figure 1.2: The first-principle calculation of Nuclear spin induced optical rotation of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen in different functional groups in molecules, and Nitrogen in different isotopes. Adapted from Reference [34]. addition to distant field, because the hyperfine interaction in short distance is significantly stronger than distant fields. This extra optical rotation induced by hyperfine interaction is the key component of NSOR, which differs from regular Faraday rotation, thereby NSOR could be regarded as an enhanced Faraday rotation. Since the hyperfine interaction is sensitive to the local electron configuration, NSOR provides a new way to investigate chemical environments of paramagnetic nuclei in atoms and molecules, as an addition to chemical shifts in traditional NMR. The promising advantages of NSOR lie in several aspects. First, NSOR increase for heavier nuclei, because the enhancement arising from the hyperfine interaction increases with the atomic number generally, while in traditional NMR light nuclei (especially 1 H) have higher sensitivity. This enhancement was observed in and 19 129 Xe [25] F [29]. Second, NSOR provides a new way to distinguish the NSOR of the same nuclei at different chemical sites, as theoretically demonstrated in Reference [34]. Due to the poor sensitivity, differences of NSOR between the same nuclei in 4 different molecular sites have not yet been clearly observed in experiments [30]. Third, as an optical detection of NMR in transparent samples, NSOR provides convenience for small sample volume detection and site-specific detection in aid of state-of-the-art manipulations of lasers, as well as improvements of sensitivity by using a multipass or optical cavity arrangement, because optical rotation is proportional to the length of optical path. Furthermore, using short laser wavelength (λ) could increase the NSOR signal as 1/λ2 far from optical resonances for the detection in a long-optical-path configuration, while operating the laser wavelength near an optical resonance could also significantly enlarge NSOR signal for short-optical-path configuration, because optical rotations will increase dramatically under near optical resonance condition. Our work As far as now, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of NSOR detection is poor, both in the low-field CW experiments [25] and in high-field pulsed experiments [29, 30], especially for the light nuclei 1 H. In order to revolve the distinct 1 H NSOR signal from different molecules both under low fields and high fields, the SNR of NSOR should be improved. Our efforts are devoted to improve the sensitivity of NSOR by elongating the optical path, as NSOR signals are linearly proportional to the length of optical path in the medium. By using a multipass cavity with 14-pass configuration, we manage to achieve a 3.15 m optical path with high optical stability in operation. In addition, we use a 405 nm laser to enhance NSOR signal due to the fact that optical rotation signal is enhanced at short wavelengths as 1/λ2 , as well as reduce optical absorption for most chemicals concerned in this work. The NSOR detection method is based on the low-field (5G) continuous-wave spin-lock technique. Although the polarization via prepolarization in a permanent magnet in our experiment is extremely small, and the optical absorption is significant due to the impurities in 5 liquids and reflection loss due to the imperfect antireflection coating on multipass mirrors, we have achieved unprecedented great SNR of the measurement of 1 H in a range of organic liquids. We measure 1 H and 19 F NSOR with a SNR greater than 15 after 1000 s of integration, and obtain relatively precision NSOR constant (at low fields, NSOR constant is averaged for the same nuclei at different chemical sites) for each chemicals with about 5% uncertainty. According to our measurements, the ratio of 1 H NSOR to Faraday rotation changes by more than a factor of 2, and the NSOR constants do not scale with the Verdet constants of the liquids, because the hyperfine interaction between electrons and nuclei is influenced by the chemical environment. We find clear distinction between proton signals for different compounds, especially for water, Methanol and Ethanol. We also obtain the precision NSOR constant of 19 F in perfluorohexane, which is a factor of 6 larger than that of 1 H in Hexane, because NSOR signal is enhanced for heavy nuclei. In addition, our experimental results generally agree with the earlier theoretical predictions [34] and current first-principle calculations for all the chemicals in this experiment. All of this work is published in Reference [36], and details of this work are described in Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 in this thesis. In order to obtain NSOR at different chemical sites in the same molecule via chemical shift, we make efforts to attempt a novel experimental scheme based on liquid-core hollow fibers to approach the measurement of NSOR under high magnetic fields, as well as draw a novel protocol for nanoliter NMR. Filling high-index liquids into fusedsilica capillary tubings makes the liquid-core hollow fibers, while we also explore other schemes based on photonic crystal fibers and Teflon AF tubings. By coiling a long fiber densely for many loops around a small rod coupled with RF coils, we find that it is possible to measure optical rotation signals inside a narrow-bore superconducting magnet. Because the liquid-core hollow fiber performs like a multimode step-index fiber, significant linear birefringence and depolarization is observed in those fibers, 6 thereby reducing the fraction of linearly polarized light for the measurement of optical rotation. By understanding the origin of birefringence and depolarization in multimode fibers, we succeed to suppress the linear birefringence by filling chiral liquids in hollow fibers, and approach near single-mode operation by means of launching light beam into the fiber core under the mode match condition. In addition, we find the mode dispersion arising from bending-induced birefringence affects the bandwidth of optical signal in practice. Our measurement of high-frequency (115 MHz) NSOR at a 2.7 T magnet has not yet been realized, while we are still looking for methods to improve the high-bandwidth and polarization-maintaining single-mode operation of liquid-core hollow fibers. Our attempts on the fiber-based NSOR could provide benefits for future NSOR and other optical rotation experiments. Dissertation structure The main part of this thesis consists of four chapters, 1. In Chapter 2, theories of several optical rotation phenomena, including natural optical rotation (optical activity) , Faraday rotation and NSOR, are introduced in details. This chapter elucidates the origins of those circular birefringence phenomena and the difference among them. 2. Chapter 3 describes the details of experimental setup of the CW spin-lock NMR at a low magnetic field (5 G) and a multipass cavity, as well as the traditional NMR detection and NSOR spectra for the measurement of NSOR. 3. Chapter 4 covers the analysis of the NSOR data obtained at the low-field experiment as shown in Chapter 3. In addition, first-principle calculations carried out by Ikäläinen et al [34, 36] are also included in order to compare with the experimental results. 7 4. Chapter 5 is mainly about the experimental setup of liquid-core hollow fiber in a superconducting magnet, as well as the liquid-core fiber theory and experiments. The theoretical basis of multimode step-index fiber is especially reviewed in details, because the liquid-core fiber is actually a multimode step-index, thereby exhibiting the linear birefringence, depolarization and bandwidth limitation. 8 Chapter 2 Theory Optical rotation is the change of the plane of polarization of a polarized light beam when it travels through some materials. Optical rotation is a broad research area, as it occurs under various conditions, e.g. in solutions of chiral molecules, solids with rotated crystal planes, spin-polarized gases of atoms or molecules, some materials in a magnetic field or electrical field, and nuclear-spin polarized mediums. Optical rotation is essentially due to circular birefringence, which rotates the plane of polarization of light but still keeps it linearly polarized. In this chapter, theories of several types of optical rotation are reviewed. In Section 2.1, the optical rotation is specifically defined as natural optical rotation, widely known as optical activity in chemistry, which is a type of natural phenomenon that occurs in chiral molecules and crystalline structures. Then the magnetic-field induced optical rotation, named as Faraday rotation, and the Nuclear Spin induced Optical Rotation (NSOR), will be introduced in Section 2.2 and Section 2.3 respectively. 2.1 Natural optical rotation Natural optical rotation, termed as optical activity, was initially discovered in the quartz crystal and some organic liquids, such as turpentine and sugar solution. It was 9 eventually realized that the source of natural optical activity is a chiral molecular or crystal structure which arises when the structure has a sufficiently low symmetry that it is not superposable on its mirror image. These two distinct forms generate optical rotations of equal magnitude but opposite sense at a given wavelength. According to early experiments, at given wavelength, the rotation angle is proportional to the optical path L inside the optically active medium, θ = αλ · L, while the constant αλ is a specific constant for this material at the given wavelength. When the wavelength is different, the rotation angle is roughly inversely proportional to the square of the wavelength λ. More accurate experimental data shows that there exists a empirical dispersion formula [37] between the rotation constant θ and wavelength λ θ = Σj Bj , λ2 − λ2j (2.1) where λj and Bj could be interpreted from experimental data, and λj is also the visible or near ultraviolet absorption wavelength, which could be explained by modern quantum theory. In optics, the optical rotation in chiral molecules solutions and crystals is explained by circular birefringence, the difference of indices of refraction for left- and right-circular polarizations in propagation. There are three types of polarization of light: linear, circular and elliptical polarization. The linear polarization, or plane polarization, of light is a confinement of the electric field vector or magnetic field vector to a given plane along the direction of propagation, while the elliptical polarization is the polarization of light such that the tip of the electric field vector describes an ellipse in any fixed plane intersecting the direction of light propagation. The circular polarization is a special case of elliptical polarization, in which the electric field of the passing wave does not change strength but only changes direction in a periodical rotary manner. Apparently, since the electric vector could be rotated in two manner, clockwise and counter-clockwise, the circular polarization is further classified as left10 and right-circularly polarization. In most atomic and optical physics literatures, the left- and right-circularly polarized light is denoted as σ + and σ − light respectively, which will be used in the following part of this thesis as well. The electric field vector of a right-circularly polarized light beam is illustrated in Figure 2.1. z Figure 2.1: The change of instantaneous electric field vectors of a right-circularly polarized (σ − ) light beam propagating along +z direction. The electric field vector rotates clockwise when viewed in the −z direction from the target. Here, the direction of left and right is defined by pointing one’s left or right thumb of the observer toward the light source. Adapted from Reference [38]. The linearly polarized light can be regarded as a superposition of left(σ + )- and right(σ − )-circularly polarized light beams of equal amplitude, and the orientation of the linear polarization plane is a function of the relative phases of the two components. As shown in Figure 2.2, the electric component vector of right- and left-circularly polarized light beam could be written as ~ + = E0 [x̂ · cos(kz − ωt) + ŷ · sin(kz − ωt)], left circular E 2 E 0 ~− = E [x̂ · cos(kz − ωt) − ŷ · sin(kz − ωt)], right circular 2 (2.2) with x̂ and ŷ unit vectors perpendicular to the propagation direction, k = ωn/c, where c is the light speed, ω is the angular frequency of light, and n is the refractive index for this wavelength inside the medium. The superposition of these two components 11 ~ = x̂·E0 cos(kz −ωt), whose with equal amplitude is a linearly polarized light beam, E electric component vector is along the x̂ direction, as shown in Figure 2.2(a). When the linearly polarized light beam passes through some optically active medium, the left- and right-circular polarization component undergoes different phase shift. In other words, the refractive index n+ and n− for these two components are slightly different, this phenomenon is called circular birefringence. From Equation 2.2, the phase of σ + and σ − light is ϕ+ = ωt − ωz n c + and ϕ− = ωt − ωz n c − . As the light propagates forward inside the medium by distance d, the phase difference between these two components is ϕ+ − ϕL− = ωd (n+ c − n− ), and the superposition of them becomes ωd ωd ωd ~ = E0 cos (n + n− )/2 − ωt · x̂ · cos (n − n− )/2 + ŷ · sin (n − n− )/2 E c + c + c + (2.3) which shows that electric vector is still a linearly polarized, but is rotated with an angle ωd (n+ c − n− )/2, i.e. (ϕ+ − ϕ− )/2, as shown clearly in Figure 2.2(b). In the perturbative region, which means the frequency of light is far from optical resonance, the index shift for left- and right-circularly polarized component is quite small and almost the same but with different sign, while the light intensity will not be affected by the circular birefringence. In addition, from Equation 2.3, the rotation angle θ= ωd (n+ c − n− )/2 , so it is proportional to the propagation path distance d in the medium, θ= π (n − n− ) · d , λ + where λ is the light wavelength, and αλ = π (n+ λ (2.4) − n− ) is the optical activity con- stant for the material. A positive optical rotation constant corresponds to clockwise rotation, while it is anticlockwise for negative rotation constant. 12 (a) ( b) E E+ E- θ E EE+ φφ+ Figure 2.2: The composition of left- and right-circular polarization light. (a) A ~+ linearly polarized light beam is decomposed into coherent left-circularly polarized E ~ − components. The propagation direction is out of the and right-circularly polarized E plane of the paper. The arrow is the electric field vector. (b) The rotated polarization plane with angle θ in some optically active medium. Due to circular birefringence, the left- and right-circular polarization component is rotated with different angles, leading to a rotation of the linear polarization plane by angle θ = (ϕ+ − ϕ− )/2. The optical rotation occurs naturally in organic liquids consisting of chiral molecules and some crystals with structure having a sufficiently low symmetry that it is not superposable on its mirror image. The physical reason why the refractive indices are different for left- and right-circularly polarized light lies in the different responses of mirror-image pairs of chiral molecules or crystal structure. For example, Lactic acid molecules have a pair of enantiomers that are mirror images of each other, as shown in Figure 2.3. As an analogy, this pair of molecules can ben viewed as a pair of helix with different handedness. The helix with left- or right-handedness will responds differently to left- and right-circularly polarized light during interaction: only one type of circular polarization could follow one type of helix effectively. As a consequence, they have different polarizabilities for the light with the same wavelength and the same circular polarization, hence giving a slight difference in refractive index and causing optical rotation. 13 COOH COOH C CH3 C H H CH3 HO OH (R)-(-)-Lactic acid (S)-(+)-Lactic acid Figure 2.3: Lactic acid molecules have a pair of enantiomers: (S)-(+)-lactic acid (left) and (R)-(–)-lactic acid (right). They are nonsuperposable mirror images of each other. In order to give a physical explanation for the optical rotation of chiral materials, some analysis based on classical electromagnetism should be used in the following part. In a pure electrical field, the electrical polarization of material is normally expressed as P = N αE. However, for the light, as an electromagnetic wave, there is an oscillating magnetic field perpendicular to the electrical field, which induces a spatial variation of electrical field, according to Maxwell equation − ∂B = ∇ × E, ∂t (2.5) hence producing an extra electrical polarization in the material. The total electrical polarization could be written as P = N αE − N β Ḃ. (2.6) where N is the number density of molecules N/V , α is the electrical polarizability, and β is an another material characteristic constant that relates magnetic field and electrical polarization. Further analysis based on quantum mechanics shows that β is nonzero for chiral molecules, but zero for achiral molecules. From Equation 2.5, the induced extra electrical polarization is in a plane parallel to B but perpendicular to E, while the term αE is parallel to the electrical vector of light. As a result, the total 14 polarization plane is rotated from the direction of the electrical vector of light, thus rotating the polarization plane of a propagating light beam. Furthermore, based on the total polarization P in Equation 2.6, from Maxwell equation, ∇ × B = −µ0 ∂ (ε0 E + P) , ∂t (2.7) we can obtain a differential equation for the magnetic component B alone, 2 ∇ B = µ 0 ε0 αN 1+ ε0 B̈ + µ0 βN ∇ × B̈, (2.8) given that ∇ × ∇ × B = −∇2 B. For a right(+)- or left(−)-circurally polarized light beam, the time dependance of the electrical and magnetic component vector on time is E± = E0 (î · cos φ± ± ĵ · sin φ± ) (2.9a) B± = B0 (∓î · sin φ± + ĵ · cos φ± ) (2.9b) where φ± = ωt − k± z, î and ĵ is a pair of orthogonal vector units perpendicular to the propagation direction. Equation 2.9a is a similar expression as Equation 2.2, but with a more brief format. From Equation 2.9b, we can obtain ∇ × B± = ∓k± B± (2.10a) 2 ∇2 B± = −k± B± (2.10b) 15 B̈± = −ω 2 B± (2.10c) Furthermore, after substituting the above three equations of B± into Equation 2.8 , a quadratic equation of k± is shown as 2 k± αN ± µ0 βN ω 2 k± . = µ 0 ε0 ω 1 + ε0 2 (2.11) √ Since k± = ωn± /c (light speed c = 1/ µ0 ε0 ), where n+ and n− is the refractive index of right- and left-circularly polarized light, then we can finally get the expression of refractive index n± by solving Equation 2.11 to first order approximation, n± ≈ 1 + ωβN αN ± 2ε0 2cε0 (2.12) In the achiral material, β=0, the refractive index is the same for right- and leftcircularly polarized light, therefore there is no natural optical activity. In chiral material, β 6= 0, ∆n = ωβN , cε0 so an optical rotation is induced after the light beam passing through a length of L inside the medium, 1 ∆θ = N µ0 ω 2 βL. 2 (2.13) The difference in material constant β of chiral and achiral molecules is essentially due to the difference in their symmetries [39]. Some perturbative analysis [40] based on quantum mechanics shows that the induced dipole moment in an electromagnetic field is X ωn0 h0 |µ̂| ni · hn |µ̂| 0i X h0 |µ̂| ni · hn |m̂| 0i ± 2 2 ± µ = Re Im E (t) − Ḃ± (t) 2 2 2 2 ~ ω − ω ~ ω − ω n0 n0 n6=0 n6=0 (2.14) 16 S1 Rz , x, y Rx , Ry , z 0 A A00 E 1 1 σh 1 -1 S2 Rx , Ry , Rz x, y, z Ag Au E i 1 1 1 -1 (a) Character table for group S1 (b) Character table for group S2 Table 2.1: Character table for group S1 and S2 (Group symbol S1 is also termed as Cs , and S2 is termed as Ci ). An achiral molecule has either a mirror plane (S1 symmetry) or an inversion center (S2 symmetry) inside itself. Adapted from Reference [42]. where operator µ̂ is the electrical dipole moment, i.e. µz = −e · z, operator m̂ is the ∂ is the angular momentum magnetic dipole moment, i.e. mz = − 2me e · lz (lz = −i~ ∂ϕ operator), ωn0 is the energy difference between energy level |0i and |ni, and ω is the angular frequency of the electromagnetic field. By comparing Equation 2.14 with Equation 2.6, we can get X h0 |µ̂| ni · hn |m̂| 0i 2 β = − Im , 2 2 ~ ω − ω n0 n6=0 (2.15) which is a sum of the multiplication of electronic dipole and magnetic dipole and magnetic transition moments divided by quadratic difference of frequency detuning, called as Rosenfeld Polarizability [41]. Apparently, this expression gives a generally reasonable explanation for the empirical dispersion formula of rotation constant in Equation 2.1. Rn0 = Im h0 |µ̂| ni · hn |m̂| 0i is rotational strength of the transition 0 → n. For achiral molecules, there exists a mirror plane or an inversion center inside the molecule, which corresponds a symmetry group S1 or S2 . The electrical dipole moment µ̂ is a translational operator, the magnetic dipole moment m̂ a rotational operator. However, in a S1 or S2 symmetry group, no component of translation and rotation with the same coordinate variable belongs to the same symmetry species from group character tables, as shown in Table 2.1, so the product h0 |µ̂| ni · hn |m̂| 0i in the rotation strength must be zero for any molecular orbital n, which means that β is zero for achiral molecules, while for chiral molecules it is usually nonzero. 17 Rotation angle, ∆ n0 1 Absorption Rotation constant 0 a b Figure 2.4: (a) The dispersion of optical rotation near an absorption line. (b) The dispersion of optical rotation of in the vicinity of two absorption bands. Adapted from Reference [40]. In addition, under a reflection, the operator µ̂ and m̂ have different symmetries: µ̂ changes its sign, while m̂ does not. As a result, under a reflection, the rotation strength Rn0 and hence β changes its sign, which actually shows that, for a pair of enantiomers that is mirror image of each other, the Rosenfeld Polarizability β has equal but opposite value. That’s why a pair of enantiomers rotate the polarization plane of light by an equal angle but with opposite directions. The perturbative result in Equation 2.15 straightforwardly leads to the empirical dispersion formula in Equation 2.1, based on the fact that λ2 λ2n0 1 , = ωn2 0 − ω 2 c2 λ2 − λ2n0 (2.16) as the parameter Bj is also dependent on the wavelength that is determined from experiments. When the optical wavelength is near one of the absorption line of molecules, i.e. resonant condition, the optical rotation could be thereby enhanced dramatically. It seems that the rotation angle will reach a critical point at λ = 18 λn0 , however, it will not go to the infinity actually, because the above perturbative theory break down at this point. In practice, the dispersion curve is more like that shown as the blue line in Figure 2.4(a), because real energy levels in molecules always possesses some linewidth. Molecules normally have a lot of absorption bands, hence, the dispersion curve of optical rotation is typically a superposition of several dispersion curves. e.g. the optical rotation has a dispersive shape as shown in Figure 2.4 in case of two absorption bands. 2.2 Faraday rotation Faraday rotation is the optical rotation in a magnetic field, first discovered by Michael Faraday in 1845 as the first experimental evidence that light and magnetism are related.. The effect, like optical rotation induced by organic molecules, is due to circular birefringence, the difference of indices of refraction for left- and right-circular polarizations in propagation. In the presence of an external magnetic field, the atomic or molecular states in material are weakly perturbed, resulting with splitting of magnetic sub-levels, i.e. Zeeman effect, which causes slightly difference for left- and rightcircular polarization individually, due to the fact that different magnetic sub-levels only response to either left- or right-circular polarization component. This response difference induced by magnetic field causes the dispersion in the optical refraction indices, although it is of the order of a few parts per million normally in nonresonant condition, far less than the optical rotatory power in chiral materials. In near resonant condition, that is the light wavelength is in the neighborhood of one absorption line of the material, the Faraday rotation angle could be enhanced significantly, named as Macaluso-Corbino Effect, while the light might acquire partial elliptical polarization due to absorption difference . The Faraday rotation has some applications in measuring instruments, for example, it is used to measure optical rotatory power of materials 19 θ B d E Figure 2.5: Polarization rotation due to the Faraday effect. The electric field vector plane (polarization plane E) is rotated by the magnetic field component B that is parallel to the light beam propagation direction. The rotation angle θ is linearly proportional to Faraday rotation constant(Verdet constant) v and the optical path distance d inside the optically active medium. (Adapted from Wikipedia) for chemical analysis, sense remote magnetic fields, detect the polarization of electron spins in semiconductors in spintronics research, and manufacture high sensitivity atomic magnetometers based on alkali vapor polarized by optical pumping [43, 44]. In optics, Faraday rotators, based on the large rotatory power in some material, such as terbium gallium garnet, can be used for amplitude modulation of light, and are the basis of optical isolators to prevent unwanted feedback light for laser cavities. As illustrated in Figure 2.5, in Faraday rotation, the plane of polarization is rotated after passing through some medium when there is a magnetic component parallel to the the light propagation direction. The rotation angle of polarization plane is proportional to the intensity of the magnetic field component, as well as the length of the optical path in the medium. Hence, the relation between the rotation angle of the polarization and the magnetic field (not too strong) in a transparent material is described in a linear expression: θ = ν · B · d, 20 where, the constant ν is called Verdet constant. A positive Verdet constant corresponds to L-rotation (anticlockwise) when the direction of propagation is parallel to the magnetic field and to R-rotation (clockwise) when the direction of propagation is anti-parallel. Thus, if a ray of light is passed through a material and reflected back through it, the rotation doubles. The Faraday rotation is chromatic, i.e. Verdet constant has a dispersion relation in terms of the optical wavelength, empirically expressed as ν = Σj Aj , λ2 − λ2j (2.17) which is similar to the dispersion formula of optical rotations in optically active medium as shown in Equation 2.1. Therefore, the dispersion dependence of natural optical rotation, as shown in Figure 2.4, is also adopted to Faraday rotation. The classical interpretation of Faraday rotation is a typical example shown in some classical electromagnetism text books, as the motion of electrons is modeled as a microscopic oscillator coupled with external magnetic field, and then an accumulated phase difference of left- and right-handed components of a linearly polarized wave as they traverse the medium could be deduced from classical analysis, as well as the classical interpretation of Zeeman splitting. However, the classical analysis can not give quantitative interpretation and related computation for Faraday rotation in practical material, which have complicated electronic structures. In the following, the quantum interpretation for Faraday rotation will be reviewed. In the presence of an external static magnetic field, a spectral line will split into several components, well known as Zeeman splitting. For example, the Hamiltonian of an atom in a magnetic field is − H = H0 + → µ · B, 21 (2.18) F’=0 F=1 (a) (b) Figure 2.6: (a) Zeeman splitting of F=1 and F=0 state in the presence of a magnetic field. F=1 level splits into three Zeeman sublevels M=-1, 0, +1. (b) Different responses of left-(σ + ) and right-(σ − ) circularly polarized light in an F=1→F’=0 atomic transition with an magnetic field. → − → − → − − where the magnetic moment → µ = µB (gg L + gs S )/~, L the total orbital angular → − momentum, S the total spin angular momentum. In the weak-field case, the magnetic − potential energy VM = → µ ·B has a eigenvalue subset according to the quantum number → − − combination of l and → s for each orbital, VM = µB Bmj gj (2.19) where, gj is the Landé g-factor dependent on the state of l and s. mj is the zcomponent of the total angular momentum, which has a (2j + 1) fold degeneracy → − → − (j = l + s ). Considering the hyperfine interaction, the quantum number of → − − → − nuclear spin should also be counted in, F = l + → s + I , and mF is thereby restricted by all of these quantum number. In the case of F=1 (e.g. l = 0, s=1/2 and I=1/2), mF could be either +1, 0 or −1, forming a triplet sublevel splitting with energy shift ∆E = mF · gµB B, while there is no splitting for F=0, as shown in Figure 2.6(a). 22 Photon σ+ σ− π Absorption ∆m=+1 ∆m=−1 ∆m=0 Emission ∆m=−1 ∆m=+1 ∆m=0 Table 2.2: Change of the magnetic quantum number ∆mF under absorption or emission of photons. As mentioned in Section 2.1, the left-circular polarization is called σ + light and right-circular is σ − . This statement is adopted from the physics that photon spin also possesses angular moment, as the spin angular momentum of polarized light is considered a circularly polarized light beam directed at a target. The angular momentum of left-circular polarized photon σ + is +1, while for right-circular polarized photon σ − it is -1. Now if we consider the optical transition from F=1 to an upper state F0 =0, due to the presence of the magnetic field, there are three transitions, mF =-1, 0, +1 to F0 =0. In order to conserve the total angular momentum during state transitions, as shown in Table 2.2, the transition becomes circular-polarization selective, mF = −1 to F0 =0 will absorb a σ + photon, while mF = +1 to F0 =0 will absorb a σ − photon. In addition, due to the magnetic field B, Zeeman sublevel mF =±1 has a energy shift ±gF µB Bz , so the resonant frequency for σ + and σ − light is also shifted correspondingly. Because the refractive index is dispersive in terms of the detuning of light frequency from a transition frequency, n(ω) ≈ 1 + 2πχ0 γ0 2(ω − ω0 ) + iγ0 (2.20) where χ0 is the amplitude of the linear susceptibility, and γ0 is the linewidth of energy level. The above expression of n(ω) leads to a Lorentzian lineshape. For the incoming linearly polarized light beam with single frequency that could be decomposed into two equal components of σ + and σ − , the refractive index is slightly shifted by the longitude component of magnetic field Bz 23 n± ≈ 1 + 2πχ0 γ0 . 2(ω − ω0 ∓ gF µB Bz ) + iγ0 (2.21) Therefore the difference between the refractive indices n± for σ + and σ − light is n+ (ω) − n− (ω) = −2πχ0 4gF µB Bz /γ0 2 . ω−ω0 2 (2gF µB Bz /γ0 ) + 1 − 2i γ0 (2.22) This results in the dispersive shape shown in Figure 2.7, where only the real part of refractive indices n± is depicted, since the imaginary part induces elliptical polarization especially under near resonance condition but will not affect the rotation of polarization plane. Due to the difference of refractive index, after passing through the medium in magnetic field, the two circular components acquires a relative phase shift ϕ= ωd · Re(n+ − n− ), c (2.23) where d is the optical path in the medium, then the polarization plane of the original light beam experience an optical rotation with angle θ = ϕ/2, which could be expressed in terms of frequency detuning ∆ = ω − ω0 , θ= πχ0 ωd b[1 + b2 − (2∆/γ0 )2 ] · c (2∆/γ0 )2 + [1 + b2 − (2∆/γ0 )2 ]2 (2.24) where b = 2gF µB Bz /γ0 . The optical rotation takes the dispersive form of Re(n+ −n− ), as shown in the bottom of Figure 2.7. In summary, the different responses of σ + and σ − polarized light both in terms of the circular polarization direction and resonant frequency lead to a difference in refractive indices in the same material. The above analysis is based on a single transition, F = 1 to F 0 =0, which is valid when the optical wavelength is near this transition, named as resonant Faraday 24 Re n + Re n − ω Re n + − Re n − Figure 2.7: (Top) Refractive indices as a function of light frequency for σ + and σ − light (Real parts of n± is the refractive index, while imaginary parts describes absorption. Imaginary part of n± causes elliptical polarization, which is not considered in this thesis). The curves are shifted with respect to one another due to the magnetic field. (Bottom) Linear optical rotation is proportional to the difference between Re n+ and Re n− . rotation or Macaluso-Corbino effect, and thereby these two states dominate over other states on the contribution to optical rotation. In most cases, we should consider all the other states for the analysis, since Faraday rotation occurs even when light frequency is far from resonance of any absorption band of the material. In the following, a more systematic description of Faraday rotation as an integration of all molecular states in perturbative treatment following from [45, 38, 31] is shown. In the microscopic description, the electrical polarization could be written as P = N αE (comparing with Equation 2.6, the magnetic derivative term is not included, since there is no natural optical activity in achiral molecules, and only the electrical polarization part contributes to Faraday rotation). In a oscillating electrical field, the polarizability α is normally a complex and frequency-dependent tensor. For a circularly polarized and monochromatic light beam, the Maxwell equation gives 1 n± ≈ 1 + µ0 c2 N ((αxx + αyy ) ± i(αxy − αyx )) 4 25 (2.25) where αij is the components of polarization tensor α, so the optical rotation could be expressed as 1 0 θ = µ0 cωLN αxy 2 (2.26) 0 , here L is the optical path, c is the light speed, ω is the light frequency, and αxy = (αxy − αyx )/2. Perturbative analysis[45, 38, 31] shows that the polarizability 0 αxy dq X 2X ω =− ρqj Im(hq |µx | pi hp |µy | qi) 2 2 ~ j=1 ω − ω pq p6=q (2.27) j where, qj is the subspace of electronic state |qi, e.g. the Zeeman splitting sublevels, ρqj is the relative population distribution in state |qi. In the absence of external field as perturbations, the net sum in Equation 2.27 is zero, because the contributions from transition between a given state |pi and complementary states |qi of the degenerate set have opposite signs, i.e. asymmetrical distribution, which reveals that the sum across the whole subspace is zero. However, in the presence of some external field, e.g. a longitude component of magnetic field B = B0 ẑ along the light propagation direction, the population and energy level symmetry is broken. The transition frequency is firstly shifted due to Zeeman splitting. According to the first-order perturbation, |p0 i = |pi − 0 ωpq = B0 X 1 up m |ui ~ u6=p ωpu x (2.28) qq ωpq − (mpp z − mx )Bz where mup x = hr |mz | pi is the z-component of the magnetic dipolar moment. Under the weak-field condition, the energy shifts are rather small, we can make an approximation 1 1 ≈ 2 02 2 ωpq − ω ωpq − ω 2 qq 2ωpq (mpp z − mz )B0 1+ 2 − ω2) ~(ωpq 26 . (2.29) 0 which leads to a perturbative expansion for αxy in terms of the weak magnetic field, 0 0 0 (D) Bz αxy (B) = αxy + αxy,z 0 (D) αxy,z = X 2ωpq 2ω X qp pq qq − 2 (mpp ρqj × z − mz )Im(µx µy ) 2 − ω2) ~ j (ω pq p6=q " X 1 1 qp pu qp pu + 2 Im(muq z (µx µy − µy µz )) ωpq − ω 2 u6=q ωuq #) X 1 pu qp uq qp uq Im(mz (µx µy − µy µz )) + ωup u6=p (2.30) (2.31) From Equation 2.26, we can get a linear dependence of the rotation angle on the magnetic field 1 0 (D) θ = µ0 cωLN αxy,z Bz , 2 (2.32) which is the general form for Faraday rotation in nonmagnetized medium. The above analysis assumes that the population in the sublevel set is subject to Boltzmann distribution in thermal equilibrium. However, the population distribution in equilibrium state could be redistributed through some methods, e.g. polarization under high magnetic field, polarization by optical pumping, by which the material is actually polarized or magnetized. This externally exerted polarization, as a second mechanism, also induced Faraday rotation. The typical value of Faraday rotation is about 1∼20µrad/(G·cm) for most common transparent liquids, e.g. water, ethanol. By means of increasing magnetic field and optical path, Faraday rotation is easy to detect, as shown in the Figure 2.8. The magnetic field can be created by a signal generator, then the induced optical rotation 27 Linear polarizer Laser Sample cell B (AC) B (AC) Optical rotation polarizing beam splitter Photodiode Faraday Rotation Photodiode Figure 2.8: Measurement scheme of Faraday rotation. The magnetic field is in alternative form(AC) driven by a signal generator or amplifier, then the optical rotation is thereby an AC signal after transduced by photodiode detectors under balanced operation and finally analyzed by a Lock-in amplifier. takes the same oscillating frequency after passing through the medium. Following with a polarization beam splitter that is place at balanced condition (i.e. split the beam into two equal components), two separate components of the polarized beam enter a corresponding photodiode detector, finally providing voltage signal for analysis with help of a Lock-in amplifier. If the light beam passes through the sample cell and reflects back through it, the rotation doubles. Furthermore, if we put this material in an optical or multi-pass cavity, in which the light could reflected back and forth for a lot of times, the rotation could be enhanced linearly by multiplying with the pass number, while this mechanism also apply for many other magnetic-field induced optical rotation phenomenon, e.g. Nuclear spin induced optical rotation as described in this thesis. 2.3 Nuclear spin induced optical rotation Nuclear spin optical rotation (NSOR) is a recently developed technique for detection of nuclear magnetic resonance via rotation of light polarization in a nuclear spin-polarized medium. NSOR signals depend on hyperfine interactions with virtual optical excitations, giving nuclear information as a local chemical environment. The rotation of light polarization is similar to the Faraday effect caused by a nuclear 28 magnetic field but is enhanced by the hyperfine interaction between nuclear spins and virtual electronic excitations. In some sense, NSOR is an enhanced version of Faraday rotation, and it could reveal the strength of nucleus-electron interaction in various atoms or molecules. Under an external magnetic field, the nuclear magnetization in a liquid induces a magnetic field BM that could lead to optical rotation θ = VN SOR LBM , which is proportional to the rotation constant VN SOR and the length of the sample L. Actually, the induced magnetic field BM can be divided into a short-range field and a distant dipolar field. The distant dipolar field is an averaged magnetic field over all magnetized nuclear spins, for example, a free electron inside the medium with cylindrical symmetry can sense a magnetic field Bd = µ0 M, (2.33) whereM is the macroscopic magnetization M = N mN (2.34) Here, mN is the magnetic moment of nuclei in the medium, N is the polarized spin number, and V is the sample volume. Therefore, in a nuclei-magnetized medium, the regular Faraday rotation occurs due to the distant magnetic field Bd , i.e. 1 0 (D) θd = µ0 cωLN αxy,z Bd . 2 (2.35) Besides the distant magnetic field inside the medium, a local short-range field exists when the electron is close to a nuclear spin, especially for an orbital electron in the vicinity of the nearby nucleus in the same atom or molecule. This short-range interaction is also actually the intramolecular hyperfine interaction, which consists of spin dipole-dipole interaction and contact interaction. This contact interaction can be 29 Distant interaction N Hyperfine interaction e e N B B B (b) (a) Figure 2.9: (a) Distant magnetic field induced by an ensemble of nuclear spin in the polarized medium. (b) Hyperfine interaction between an nucleus and orbital-electron in the same atom or molecule. enhanced or suppressed depending on the overlap of the wavefunction of the virtual electron excitation created by the laser and the nuclear spin. The hyperfine interaction is very sensitive depending on the electron configuration, e.g. the hyperfine interaction of the hydrogen nuclei 1 H and valance electron in water is negligible, but for 129 Xe it is considerably larger than the distant magnetic field. The distant interaction and hyperfine interaction is illustrated in Figure 2.9, where the distant magnetic field is induced by an ensemble of nuclear spin, while the intramolecular hyperfine interaction occurs when the electron and nucleus is in the same atom or molecule. The short-range interaction between the electron and nuclear spin is established by means of the hyperfine coupling. For an electron of total angular momentum J = L + S interacting with a nuclear spin I at a distance r, the corresponding Hamiltonian is Hhf X µ0 ∗ g µB ~ γj hIj i = 4π j L S rj (S · rj ) 8 − +3 + πSδ(rj ) , rj3 rj3 rj5 3 30 (2.36) where g ∗ is the effective electron g-factor in the system, Ij is the nuclear spin in the molecule with its gyromagnetic ratio γi , and hIz i stands for the average nuclear spin magnetization over the ensemble. For a s-orbital electron, the dominant contribution come from the last term above, which is usually called Fermi contact interaction, since the wavefunction density of s-orbital electron overlaps with the nucleus at the center. Due to the fact that hyperfine interaction decays ∼ 1 , r3 only affiliated nuclei-electrons in the same chemical bond are considered. In addition, because of the rapid tumbling of molecule in gases and liquids, the intramolecular hyperfine interaction normally averages out in gases and liquids. The hyperfine interaction, actually the magnetic dipole interaction, could enhance the Faraday rotation as an addition to distant field. This extra optical rotation induced by local nuclear spin (or hyperfine interaction) is the key component of NSOR, which differs from regular Faraday rotation. Similar to the expression for regular Faraday rotation in Equation 2.32, the hyperfine-interaction induced an optical rotation 1 0 (N ) hIz i , θN = µ0 cωLN αxy,z 2 (2.37) 0 (N ) where αxy,z takes the same expression as Equation 2.31, but mpq z is replaced by the hyperfine interaction term αzpq , αzpq X Lz Sz 3z (S · rj ) 8 µ0 ∗ q . = γ g µB ~ p 3 − 3 + + πS δ(r ) z j 5 4π r r r 3 j j j i (2.38) A simple illustration hyperfine interaction induced optical rotation induced based on energy shift is shown in Figure 2.10. In transition 1 S0 →1 P1 , there are two transitions with different polarization, σ − for mL = 0 → mL = −1, and σ + for mL = 0 → mL = +1. If there is no energy shifts, there two transitions have the same transition energy, thereby having the same index property. When the nuclei is 31 -3/2 = -1 =0 -1/2 1/2 = +1 3/2 F=3/2 F=1/2 =0 -1/2 1/2 F=1/2 Figure 2.10: (a) Transition 1 S0 →1 P0 without nuclear spin (I = 0). (b) Hyperfine splittings due to the nuclear spin I = 1/2. (F = I + J. J(1 S0 ) = 0 and J(1 P1 ) = 1 ). The hyperfine splittings induce circular birefringence according to polarizationselective transitions. magnetic, e.g. I = 1/2, then the hyperfine splitting will shift the transition energy. According to the hyperfine splitting ∆EHF S = A [F (F +1)−J(J +1))−I(I +1)], 2 the 1 P level is split into two sets F = 1/2 and F = 3/2, with energy shifts from the original 1 P level. The transition mF (F = 1/2) = 1/2 → mF (F = 3/2) = 3/2 only absorbs σ + light, and its energy is larger than mL (1 S) = 0 → mL (1 P ) = +1. On the other hand, the σ − transition is split into two channel, mF (F = 1/2) = 1/2 → mF (F = 1/2) = −1/2 and mF (F = 1/2) = 1/2 → mF (F = 3/2) = −1/2. Especially, the transition energy of mF (F = 1/2) = 1/2 → mF (F = 1/2) = −1/2 becomes smaller, since F = 1/2 sublevel of 1 P is shifted down. The transitions mF (F = 1/2) = 1/2 → mF (F = 3/2) = 3/2 and mF (F = 1/2) = 1/2 → mF (F = 1/2) = −1/2 induce circular birefringence effect, which gives a simple explanation for NSOR. The hyperfine interaction varies for different nuclear-electron configurations and atom-molecules systems. Normally, the hyperfine interaction is dominated by Fermi contact term. For heavier atoms, the contact term enhancement increases with the atomic number Z. Since NSOR is attributed to both the distant dipolar magnetic field 32 Figure 2.11: Nuclear spin induced optical rotation and its detection. and the short-range hyperfine interaction between electrons and magnetized nuclei within short range, it is sensitive to electron-nucleus configuration, which is the basis for distinguishing 1 H NMR in various organic liquids in this thesis. The whole NSOR signal is a sum of short-distance hyperfine interaction induced optical rotation θN and the regular Faraday rotation θd arising from the magnetic field inside a magnetized medium. The two types of optical rotation θN and θd keep the same phase when nuclear spins are precessing, while they could not be distinguished in measurements actually. As to the measurement of NSOR, since its extrinsic behavior is the same as Faraday rotation, its measurement apparatus also takes the same form, as shown in Figure 2.11, except that a strong magnetic field should be used to polarized nuclear spins. Another issue is the weak signal in NSOR, due to the fact that polarization hIz i is normally quite small, e.g. it is only about 10−5 under 1 Tesla magnetic field, then the induced optical rotation angle is thereby as small as 10−5 ∼ 10−3 of regular Faraday rotation. As a consequence, several techniques, such as a long optical path in optical or multipass cavities, short wavelength laser, near-resonance condition, should be implemented to aid the detection of NSOR. 33 Chapter 3 Experiments under low magnetic fields The first Nuclear-Spin-induced Optical Rotation (NSOR) experiment is based on lowfield CW spin-lock technique, first developed by Savukov et al. in Reference [25]. In this paper, NSOR signal of 1 H water prepolarized by a high field magnet is shown to be detectable under a low magnetic field, while the signal-to-noise ratio is about 4.5 after averaging 1000 s. However, in order to distinguish the same magnetic nucleus 1 H in different organic liquids, a higher signal-to-noise ratio should be required. In this chapter, the multipass scheme and a 405 nm laser is implemented in the NSOR measurement of some organic liquids, which enhances the 1 H NSOR signal-noise-ratio to be about 16 after averaging 1000 s, then it is adequate to distinguish the NSOR difference of 1 H in these organic liquids. There are several NSOR signal improvement methods for choice. The first method is using lasers with a shorter wavelength(λ) , since the optical rotation is generally proportional to 1/λ2 when it is far from any optical resonances. For example, comparing with the 770 nm laser, the 405 nm laser could enhance the optical rotation signal by a factor of 3.6 approximately. In addition, when the laser is close to any 34 optical resonance, although the light transmission will be much smaller, the rotation constant will dramatically rising. In practice, the light absorption and transmission should be considered as well. For most transparent pure liquids, i.e. Water, Ethanol and Toluene, the electronic absorption lies in the UV region ranging from 150 nm to 350 nm, and their absorption linewidths are rather broad, as shown in Figure 3.1. Therefore, the UV laser could not be used in the optical liquid NMR, due to the serious absorption in most organic liquids. In the meanwhile, a lot of transparent (in visible light range) chemicals have almost smallest absorption around 400 nm, hence a 405 nm laser (this wavelength is commonly accessible in diode lasers) is capable of passing through long optical path. For example, The absorption coefficient of water at 405 nm α(λ) =6·10−5 cm−1 , according to the Beer-Lambert law I = e−α(λ)·L I0 its half-attenuation length is L 1 '115m. 2 Figure 3.1: Optical absorption coefficients for water from reference. The lowest absorption region is located around 400nm, which is at the edge between UV and visible light. (This figure is adapted from http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/vibrat.html) 35 In addition, the optical rotation angle is also proportional to the optical path: θ =V ·L where θ is the optical rotation angle, V is the rotation constant, and L is the optical path inside the medium. Therefore, by simply increasing the optical path length, the rotation signal is linear proportionally enhanced. There exists several methods to increase optical path : the optical cavity, multipass cavity, long hollow fiber. Due to the optical robustness, the multipass scheme is used in our NSOR measurements under low magnetic fields, as well as Faraday rotation measurements. The multipass scheme will be described in details in Section 3.1.2. The long-hollowfiber based method is also utilized under a high magnetic filed, which will be discussed in Chapter 5. In order to get a large NSOR signal, both a long optical path inside sample and a high spin polarization are preferred. A high spin polarization requires a high field magnet. Unlike traditional NMR based on a induction coil, NSOR experiment needs the optical direction, i.e. the sample tube, be perpendicular to the magnetic field. As far, due to technical limitations of the high field magnet, the effective space with a homogenous field inside the magnet is quite small. For example, for a superconducting magnet, the homogenous core size along the transverse direction is typically less than 10 centimeters; for a permanent magnet, the field homogeneousness is much worse. It means that only a short sample tube could be directly used inside a high field magnet. The prepolarization method could be used to aid NSOR experiments, which utilizes a high field magnet (no matter how field homogeneous it is) to polarize the magnetic nuclei in the liquid sample, and then transfer the polarized sample quickly to another low magnetic field. By using some current-driven coils, a large area with homogenous and low field could be created easily and flexibly, and therefore the arrangement of a long sample tube become possible. In this chapter, the experiment is based on 36 this prepolarization method and the NSOR signal is just measured under a 5 gauss magnetic field, which does not require any large-core superconducting magnet and high frequency electronics. 3.1 Experiment setup The detection of NSOR is based on a CW spin-lock technique [25], as shown in Figure 3.2, the liquid is circulated continuously by a pump from a reservoir to a 0.85T permanent pre-polarizing magnet, and then to a 22.5 cm long sample glass tube inside a uniform magnetic field B0 = 5 G generated by a rectangular Helmholtz coil. As the liquid enters the region of the constant magnetic field B0 , an oscillating magnetic field is applied at 22 kHz with an amplitude of B1 = 0.2 G perpendicular to the B0 field, so the nuclear spins are adiabatically transferred to the rotating frame at the NMR frequency. A 19.5 cm long solenoidal pick-up (induction) coil with 210 turns is wound around the sample tube to measure the traditional CW NMR signal and determine the polarization for each flowing liquid. With a flow speed of about 50 mL/s we find that the NMR signal drops by less than 30% from the beginning to the end of the tube, as determined by several small coils wound at different points of the sample. For water the NMR signal gives a polarization of P = 1.2 × 10−6 , corresponding to a pre-polarizing field of 0.36 T, smaller than the field of the magnet due to polarization loss during flow and inhomogeneous broadening of the NMR resonance due to B0 magnetic field gradients. The laser wavelength is chosen to be 405 nm, since NSOR is enhanced at short wavelengths as 1/λ2 . As shown in Figure 1, the multipass cell consists of two cylindrical mirrors with a small hole in one of the mirrors to let the laser beam enter and exit the cell. While optical cavities have been used in the past to amplify optical dispersion effects, multipass cells have not been widely used for this purpose, except for 37 Lock-in Amplifier 0.5Hz modulation 22KHz DAQ PD2 Current Source PD1 B0 Coil PBS NMR Coil Laser Diode 405nm B0 Coil B1 Coil 1.5T Magnet Pump Liquid Repository Figure 3.2: Apparatus for measurement of NSOR in organic liquids. The sample tube, which is placed inside the multipass cell, is 22.5 cm long with 1.5 cm inner diameter, while the bottle inside the permanent magnet has 200 mL volume. The multipass cell consists of two cylindrical mirrors with 40 cm separation and 50 cm radius of curvature. A 405 nm laser with vertical polarization is incident on the inlet hole of the left cylindrical mirror. After 14 passes the laser beam exits the same hole and its polarization is analyzed by a balanced polarimeter. The traditional NMR signal is measured with a coil wound on the sample tube. early work in Ref[Silver]. multipass cells have a number of advantages compared to optical cavities. They do not require locking the frequency of the laser to the optical cavity resonance and spatial mode matching of the input laser beam to the cavity standing wave. They also do not require optimization of the power coupling into the cavity and theoretically can have 100% power transmission. multipass cells with up to 500 light passes have been realized. The number of passes is determined solely by the distance between the mirrors, their curvature, and the twist angle between their axes of curvature. To reduce optical losses in our cell, the sample tube end windows have 38 an anti-reflection coating on the outside surfaces. While optical absorption length in very pure liquids can exceed 100 meters at 405 nm, it is very sensitive to impurities. Based on optical losses on the mirrors and sample tube windows we estimate ideal optical transmission to be 94% per pass for very pure water, but in practice found optical transmission to be about 80% per pass. We adjust the multipass cell to have 14 passes for a total optical path length of 3.15 meters. The number of passes is determined by counting the number of beam spots on each mirror. In the measurements on water the initial laser intensity of 8 mW was reduced to 0.4 mW after the multi- pass cell; the transmission was similar for other chemicals studied. Note that the increase in the photon shot noise by a factor of 4.5 due to light absorption is still less than the 14-fold increase in the optical rotation signal, demonstrating an increase of the SNR with the multipass cell. The optical rotation signal is measured with a balanced polarimeter, consisting of a polarization beam splitter and two photodiode detectors. The difference of the photodiode signals and the voltage across the pick-up coil are measured by two lockin amplifiers referenced to 22 kHz. In addition, we modulate the B0 field on and off resonance at 0.5 Hz to distinguish NMR signals from any backgrounds. For static liquids the optical rotation noise is limited by photon shot noise, but it increases by about a factor of 2 during flow, likely due to small bubbles in the liquid. The signal-to-noise ratio for water is typically about 15 after one hour, while it is larger for other organic chemicals studied in this experiment. 3.1.1 Adiabatic passage transfer and CW spin-lock technique When nuclei spins in the liquid are polarized in the permanent magnet, their polarization direction are aligned with the strong magnetic field. But when the liquid is flowing away from the magnet, the magnetic field is different, which is a superposition of the increasing static magnetic field induced by B0 coil and the fast spatially 39 decaying field of the permanent magnet. Therefore, during the process in which the liquid is transferred in to the sample tube (cell), the spin polarization direction also changes. If there is no appropriate method to guide those spins’ precession in the long transferring precess (takes about 0.1 second; ‘long’ is relative to the spin precession period 0.05 ms), the spins usually lose their coherence due to the spatial field inhomogeneity, i.e. different spins have various precessing phase and thereby cancel out each other’s signal. On the other hand, when the spin is precessing in the sample tube, the maximal oscillating NMR signal is achieved only when the spin is precessing on a plane containing the axis of induction coil. The method to resolve these two issues is implementing a continuous-wave RF field B1 , which is perpendicular to the static magnetic field B0 , as shown in Figure 3.2. Continuous RF field B1 not only help the spins from the magnet to be adiabatically transferred to the static field B0 region (also the sample tube region), but also continuously lock the precession of spins when liquid is flowing inside the sample tube, which is called as continuous wave (CW) NMR. In the following, the adiabatic passage transfer and CW spin-lock technique will be described sequentially. When the spins are transferred from the magnet to the B0 coil region, the superposition of field from the magnet and the field from B0 coil changes from 0.85 T to 5 G. At the same time, the RF field B1 is linearly oscillating at an angular frequency Ω0 =B0 γ, which is the Larmor frequency only in the presence of field B0 (here γ is the gyromagnetic ratio of 1 H), and its direction is perpendicular to B0 . This RF field B1 could be decomposed into two oppositely rotating magnetic fields due to the fact 2B1 cos Ω0 t = B1 eiΩ0 t + B1 e−iΩ0 t . Only one of these two rotating fields has the same direction as the proton spin precession under field B0 (here we name it as resonant rotating field ), thereby plays the role in locking the proton spin, while the other one (anti-resonant rotating field ) is has a reversed rotating direction and will not affect the spin precession as a result. If we choose a rotating frame with angular frequency 40 (a) Liquid flow diagram. (b) Spin adiabatic following. Figure 3.3: (a) The diagram of liquid circulation . The liquid is transfer from a 0.85 T permanent magnet to the B0 coil region (sample tube) through a plastic (PFA) tubing. (b) The adiabatic passage following illustrated in the rotating frame of oscillating field B1 . Axis x0 and z 0 are the coordinates in this rotating frame. equal to the frequency Ω0 , i.e. this frame is ‘locked’ to the resonant rotating field, → − → − then the total effective field in the rotating frame [46] is BE = (Ω0 /γ − Bi ) y 0 + B1 x0 , where Bi is the superposition of the field from magnet and the field from B0 coil, which depends on the location along the liquid flow-in path (see Figure 3.3a), and B1 is a static field in this rotating frame. As shown in Figure 3.3b, at time ta , when the spin is inside the permanent magnet, Bi = Ba ∼ 0.85 T, which is much larger than B1 (∼ 0.2 G), so the effective field BEa is almost equal to Ba , and the spin is precessing around the direction of BEa . As time goes on from ta to tb and then tc , the liquid is more and more away from the magnet but closer to the B0 (∼ 5 G) region, so the z 0 component field is reduced gradually and the effective field BE is slowly 41 approaching B1 . Throughout this process, the spin are following the direction of the effective magnetic field. At time td , when the spin enters the B0 coil region, the z 0 component field become Ω0 /γ − B0 = 0 , because the Larmor frequency Ω0 = γB0 ; therefore, at this moment, the effective field is the same as B1 , and the spin is aligned with B1 in the rotating frame, i.e. the spin is locked to the resonant rotating field B1 , while it is perpendicular to B0 and precessing around field B0 at Larmor frequency Ω0 . As long as the change rate of magnetic field is slower than the spin precession speed all through this process, the spin could continuously follow the direction of the effective magnetic field, which is termed as adiabatic passage following [47]. After the liquid undergoes adiabatic passage following along the liquid flow path, the spins enters the sample tube, in which the field B0 is homogeneous as 5 G. When the liquid is flowing inside the sample tube, the spins are perpendicular to B0 and precessing around field B0 at Larmor frequency Ω0 , and it is actually aligned with the continuous-wave rotating field B1 , termed as CW spin-lock , which is used a lot in traditional CW NMR experiments. In fact, the spin-lock technique also helps spins keeps in coherence, because spins are locked to the B1 field with the same phase. Otherwise, without this locking field, the transverse relaxation (decoherence) originated from differential precession because of the magnetic field inhomogeneity will attenuate the NMR signal quickly, although the longitude relaxation time could be up to several seconds. From our experiment results, the spin-lock technique could elongate the actual coherence time (T2 ) of spins to be more than one second. At the same time, known from the speed of liquid, the spin will stay inside the sample tube for about one second before the liquid flows outside the sample tube. During this short time, the transverse relaxation could cause the NMR signal loss within 20% from the measurement of NMR signal at different positions of the sample tube. 42 3.1.2 Multipass optical cavity Long optical path could increase the NSOR signal proportionally, but simply prolonging the sample tube length is not practical. A simple method to elongate the optical path without prolonging the sample tube is to use a multipass cavity [48, 49, 50], in which the light beam could be reflected back and forth for many times. A multipass optical cavity has several practical advantages for robust detection of optical rotation compared with optical cavities that have been used in the past to elongate the optical path. Multipass optical cavities could be built based on various configuration, e.g. White cell [48], Herriot spherical mirrors [49], astigmatic mirrors [51], cylindrical mirrors [52, 50] and circular cavity [53, 54]. Multipass cavity could achieve very long optical path lengths in a small volume and have been widely used for optical spectroscopy [55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 53, 54] and atomic magnetometry [60, 61]. In our experiment, for the convenience of measuring optical rotation signal in a cell containing liquids, we adopt the cylindrical-mirror multipass cavity, which consists of two cylindrical mirrors of equal focal lengths separated by some distance, as shown in Figure 3.4. A laser beam is injected through the hole in one of the mirrors, then the beam is periodically reflected between the mirrors and finally after some number of passes, exits through the original input hole. The cylindrical mirrors could get high-density optical pattern, with hundreds of optical spots, while the Herriott cavity with spherical mirrors is limited by the number of spots [50]. The number of optical passes is determined solely by the distance between the mirrors, their curvature, and the twist angle between their axes of curvature. With fixed mirror curvature and distance, the adjustment of the twist angle could render various optical patterns with different spot density. Figure 3.5 adapted from Reference [50] shows the effect of twist angle on optical spot pattern. Figure 3.6 shows two real images of optical patterns, 14 passes and 32 passes, on one mirror in our experiment, where the 14 passes patten is used for the NSOR 43 and Faraday rotation measurement. In the 14-pass pattern, there are seven clear light spots on one mirror, so it is a 14-pass pattern by doubling the spots number, due to the fact that the laser beam is reflected back and forth between two mirrors. In the 32-pass pattern, sixteen light spots are displayed, so it s a 32-pass pattern. These two multipass pattern are realized by using two cylindrical mirrors with 40 cm separation and 50 cm radius of curvature, while their twist angles are different. Figure 3.4: A multipass cavity is composed of two cylindrical mirror. One mirror has an on-axis input hole for laser beam. Those two mirrors could be twisted for some angle with respect to each other, rendering various multipass optical patterns. Adapted from [50]. The sample tube is placed between these two mirrors, benefiting from the elongated optical path when the laser beam is reflected back and forth in the multipass cavity. The combination of multipass cavity and the sample tube is illustrated in Figure 3.7. While optical absorption length in very pure liquids can exceed 100 meters at 405 nm, it is very sensitive to impurities and mirror reflection coefficients. Based on optical losses on the mirrors and sample tube windows we estimate ideal optical transmission to be 94% per pass for very pure water, but in practice found optical transmission to be about 80% per pass. Although high multipass numbers more than 40 could be obtained easily, due to the considerable optical reflection loss and liquid impurity loss in the current apparatus, the optical transmission is roughly attenuated 44 Figure 3.5: (a) Spot pattern for 26 passes with a 90 deg crossed cylindrical–cylindrical mirror cell at d/f=0.88. (b) Dense spot pattern of 122 passes created by rotating front mirror by 9 deg. Adapted from [50]. exponentially according to the pass-number. Higher initial laser intensity (∼100mW) is feasible, but the optical rotation signal is only proportional to the square root √ of optical transmission intensity I, which can not compensate the large-numbermultipass optical loss. In addition, the inherent current noise from the diode laser increases for higher intensity light output. Therefore, in our experiment, we adjust the multipass cell to have 14 passes as a optimal configuration, determined by counting the number of beam spots on each mirror, with a total optical path length of 3.15 meters. In the measurements on water the initial laser intensity of 8 mW was reduced to 0.4 mW after the multipass cell due to scattering by impurities; the transmission was similar for other chemicals studied. 45 (a) 14-pass pattern (b) 32-pass pattern Figure 3.6: Two multipass optical patterns. a) 14-pass pattern. As shown, there are seven clear light spots on one mirror, so it is a 14-pass pattern by doubling the spots number, due to the fact that the laser beam is reflected back and forth between two mirrors. b) 32-pass pattern. Sixteen light spots are displayed, so it s a 32-pass pattern. These two multipass pattern are realized by using two cylindrical mirrors with 40 cm separation and 50 cm radius of curvature, while their twist angles are different. 3.1.3 Cell configuration The cell is a sample tube with two windows at two ends for laser beam passing through, and liquid samples could flow inside it. As shown in Figure 3.8, the cell body is a cylindrical tube made of pyrex glass, two glass pipes are connected to it as two inlets for liquid flowing. Two quartz windows with single-side anti-reflection (AR) coating are cemented to the left and right ends of the pyrex tube. This type of windows is actually a beam sampler (BSF10-A, Thorlabs) that has one-side anti-reflection coating (the side of coating is facing outside of the cell), which could effectively reduce the light reflection loss on both the air-to-coated-glass and glass-to-liquid interfaces as the light needs to pass through the window before entering the liquid-filled cell body, because of the relatively small difference of refractive index between air and 46 Figure 3.7: Illustration of a multipass cavity based on a pair of cylindrical mirrors. The light-purple cylinder is the cell body filled with liquid. Two cylindrical mirrors with anti-reflection coating on surface are placed outside this cell. The purple lines illustrate the light beams which is reflected back and forth between two cylindrical mirrors. AR coated glass and between glass and liquid (e.g. water). The spacing between the inlet and the window is as small as possible, in order to reduce dead volume of flow. Apparently, a larger cell diameter could provide a larger sample volume, which could enhance the traditional NMR signal sensed by the induction coil; A large diameter also aids the setup and adjustment of multipass cavity, since the freedom of laser beam paths is limited by the cell body in practice, although the multipass cavity is large enough to realize a high freedom of multipass optical arrangement. However, considering that the relaxation time of spin polarization in water and other organic liquids is about 1∼5 seconds, the diameter should be controlled within some range so that the flow could only stay inside the cell body for an average of one second. In addition, a smaller cell diameter benefits from homogeneous magnetic field. In this experiment, the cell is manufactured shown in Figure 3.9, the effective length of cell is about 20 cm (the liquid turbulence partially mixes polarized and unpolarized liquid in the dead volume), where the liquid could continuously refreshed. The NMR induction coil (blue) is wound tightly around the cell body, consisting of 210 turns of copper wire with insulation coatings. Besides the main coil, five short coils 47 Quantity Cell whole length(L) 22.50cm Coil whole length 19.50cm Coil Number(N) 210 Cell inner Diameter 1.50cm Cell inner cross section(S) 1.77cm2 B0 ∼ 5G Permanent magnet B 0 0.85T Liquid temperature ∼ 300K Liquid flow speed <0.8gpm (60mL/s) Table 3.1: Parameters of this experiment about cell, coil and flow speed (Red) are placed at different positions across the cell, which is used to monitor the polarization decay by measuring the NMR signal at each position. The parameters of this experiment about cell, coil and flow speed is listed in Table 3.1. Figure 3.8: Picture of cell (the sample tube). The red-brown layer is the coil. The cell body is a cylindrical tube made of pyrex glass, two glass pipes are connected to it for liquid flowing. Two quartz windows with single-side coating are cemented to the left and right ends of the pyrex tube. This type of windows is actually a beam sampler purchased from Thorlabs. Since this window only has one-side anti-reflection coating, it could be used to reduce the light reflection loss between both the liquid-to-glass and glass-to-air interface. 48 6.4cm 11.3cm 15.0cm 19.2cm 1 2 3 4 5 1.5cm 1.8cm 0.0cm 0 20 turns 6 210 turns (single layer) 1.5cm 19.5cm 1.5cm Figure 3.9: Drawing of the cell (the sample tube). The effective length is 19.5cm (exclude dead volumes between the liquid inlet and window at both ends), where the liquid could continuously refreshed. The NMR induction coil (blue) is wound tightly around the cell body, consisting of 210 turns of copper wire with insulation coating. Besides the main coil, five short coils 1-5 (Red) are placed at different positions across the cell, which is used to monitor the polarization decay by measuring the NMR signal at each position. Two extra coil mounted 0 and 6 at the ends of the tube (almost on the window in practice) is used to estimate effective polarization in these dead zones, as liquid could not flow into these region fluently, but still have some polarization due to liquid turbulence. 3.1.4 Coil arrangement A homogeneous magnetic field B0 is crucial for the NMR and therefore the NSOR measurement, due to the fact that NMR linewidth is limited by the field homogeneousness . In Figure 3.10, when the cell body is placed in the central region horizontally, the field of B0 is produced by two identical rectangle coils (Red in front and back) with the same current direction. This coil configuration is called rectangle Helmholtz coil, usually used to create a region of nearly uniform magnetic field. A stable current source is provided to driven the B0 coil, and the current is about 1.7 A, which corresponds B 0 =5 G. This current is scanned around resonance while the frequency of B1 field is fixed. The B1 field is created by another pair of coils, which is shown as a up-down pair of rectangle coils in Helmholtz configuration. The field intensity of B1 depends on the uniformness of B0 , it should be at least twice as large as the deviation of B0 field, in order to achieve a sufficient spin-lock capability. B1 is driven by an alternative current source I1 , which is an AC power amplifier. Due to the fact 49 that I1 is alternative at frequency ∼22kHz and the B1 coil is inductive, a capacitor with 0.1µF is connected in series with the coil and current source to form a resonance circuit with a minimal impedance equal to the resistance of the coil, so that the power is consumed by the coil with maximal efficiency. The magnetic field is calculated based on the Biot-Savart law µ0 B= 4π Z C → − − Id l × → r , 3 |r| → − where I is the current, l is the coil piece expressed in vector form, r is distance from the coil piece to the space point where the magnetic field B needs to be calcu− lated, → r is the unit vector from from the coil piece to the space point. The optimal distance between the coil pair is estimated from calculation, and in practice it is then finely tuned according to the NMR signal measurement. As shown in Figure 3.11, the B0 and B0 field distribution on two orthogonal cross-sections on the horizontal direction of the cell. The maximal relative deviation ((Bmax − Bmin )/Bavg ) of B0 is 2%. Actually, the B1 intensity could not be too large, since in practice B1 could be considered as a deviation of B0 and then the superposition of B0 deviation and B1 contributes to the linewidth of NMR signal. Therefore, B1 is just controlled around twice as large as the deviation of B0 field. The used magnetic field of B0 is 5.3 G and B1 is about 0.2 G, which is consistent with the calculated results. 3.1.5 Polarimetry Polarimetry is used to measure the polarization of polarized light beams. In a polarimeter, a sample cell is placed between a linear polarizer and polarizing beam splitter (PBS), as shown in Figure 3.12. When the plane of polarized light has a 45◦ with respect to the axis of PBS, which could be easily achieved with aid of a half (λ/2) wave plate as shown in Figure 3.12, then the polarized beam is split into two 50 Y X Z X = 63.0cm Y = 7.5cm Z = 5.0cm B0~5G X = 32.2cm Y = 11.2cm Z = 22.2cm B1~0.2G Figure 3.10: Configurations of B0 and B1 coil. The red coil produces B0 field with intensity of about 5 gauss, and the blue coil produce the RF field B1 with magnitude of about 0.2 gauss. Both of them are rectangular Helmholtz coil, thus achieving homogenous magnetic field in the central region. The cell(22.5cm long) is placed horizontally at the center region of this coil configuration. linearly polarized beams that have orthogonal polarization plane to each other. At this moment, the polarimetry is called at balanced condition. The polarimetry is first balanced according to the initial polarization plane of the linearly polarized light without optical rotation, e.g. turning off magnetic field in Faraday rotation measurements. So the initial intensities of the two output beams is equal and a half of the whole intensity (I0 ), as given by π I0 π I0 sin2 ( ) = I0 cos2 ( ) = . 4 4 2 (3.1) When there is an optical rotation induced by the medium via Faraday rotation or NSOR, after exiting from the sample cell, the beam is split into two separate beams with individual intensities, given by I1 = I0 sin2 2 I2 = I0 cos 51 π 4 π 4 −θ −θ , (3.2) 10 10 5.22 10 10 5 5 5 −5 5.20 5.19 0 −5 X [cm] 0 X [cm] X [cm] 5 5.18 5.17 0 X [cm] 5.21 −1 0 1 Y [cm] −10 −1 0 1 Z [cm] 5.15 0 0.262 −5 −5 −10 −10 [Gauss] −1 0 1 Y [cm] Δ<2% (a) B0 0.266 0.264 5.16 −10 0.268 −1 0 1 Z [cm] 0.260 0.258 [Gauss] Δ<5% (b) B1 Figure 3.11: Calculated B0 and B0 field distribution on two orthogonal cross-sections on the horizontal direction of the cell. The homogeneity of B0 field is crucial for the experiment, and the intensity of B1 field should be at least twice as large as the deviation of B0 field. The maximal relative deviation of B0 is 2%. The measured magnetic field of B0 is 5.3 G and B1 is about 0.2 G, which is consistent with the calculated results. where θ is the rotation angle induced by the medium. In normal condition, Faraday rotation is rather small, typically ∼10µrad/(G · cm) for organic liquids, while Nuclear spin induced rotation angle is even smaller because the nuclear spin polarization is about 10−6 -10−5 under a 1 T magnetic field at room temperature. Thus, we can make an approximation θ ∼ 0, and thereby lead to I1 = I0 [1 + sin (2θ)]/2 ∼ I0 (1 + 2θ) /2, (3.3) I2 = I0 [1 − sin (2θ)]/2 ∼ I0 (1 − 2θ) /2, finally giving the expression of the small angle θ, θ≈ I1 − I2 2(I1 + I2 ) 52 (3.4) Linear λ/2 polarizer plate Sample cell polarizing beam splitter Photodiode 405nm Laser Photodiode Figure 3.12: Polarimetry for the analysis of polarization rotation angle In experiments, the optical intensity I1 or I2 is measured as voltage signals V1 and V2 , as photons of light are converted to electric currents in photodiodes because of the photoelectric effect (see below in Figure 5.13), and the electric current is further linearly amplified as voltage signal, Vi =Ri ·Ii , after conversion by a photodiode amplifier circuits. Therefore, the optical rotation angle is also expressed as θ≈ V1 − V2 2(V1 + V2 ) (3.5) where, V1 and V2 is the voltage value from outputs of two channels in a photodiode amplifier circuit. Here, V1 + V2 = V0 is a fixed value, due to the fact that the sum of light intensity in two channels is conserved, I1 + I2 = I0 , no matter how the light beam is split. The detection of optical signals is carried out by two photodiodes (S9195, Hamamatsu) followed by a two-channel photodiode amplifier circuit, as illustrated in Figure 5.13. Two low-noise operational amplifier (Op Amp) in inverting configuration are used to convert photoelectric currents from photodiode into voltage signal, according to Vf = ie · Rf , 53 (3.6) where ie is the photoelectric current and Rf is the feedback resistance, shown as R1 and R2 in Figure 5.13. The feedback resistors (also called amplifier resistor here) R1 and R2 are set to be the same, so the output amplification factors of these two photodiode amplifiers are the same. When the polarimetry is placed at balanced condition, the output voltage V1 ≈V2 , providing the optical rotation signal is very small (typically 0.1∼10 nrad in this experiment), therefore the balanced condition could be monitored according to the readings of V1 and V2 . The feedback capacitor is used to control the frequency bandwidth and achieve a low noise. Because the frequency of optical rotation signal is about 20 kHz, it is easy to operate the circuit near shot-noise level. A subsequent differential circuit further gives the differential signal V1 − V2 , when Ra = Rb . There are two types of noise source in the measurement of optical rotation. One p is called Johnson noise (i.e. thermal noise), nJ = 4kT · Rf , which always exists as long as any resistance is used in the detection circuits, as well as existing in the induction coil for traditional NMR detection. The other type of noise is called shot noise, which is due to the fact that the photon is received as individual particles, so it is very common in optical detection; In the photodiode amplifier circuit that is p used in this experiment, the shot noise is determined by nshot = 2e · Rf · V0 . In this experiment at low magnetic fields, the shot noise dominates, as Rf (tens of kΩ) and V0 (∼10 V) is relatively large. 3.2 NMR signal calculation, measurement and calibration The traditional NMR signal is measured by the induction coil that is wound around the cell body. When the nuclear spins are periodically precessing around B0 field direction, the nuclear magnetization creates an alternative magnetic field that is per54 Figure 3.13: The two-channel photodiode amplifier circuit with differential output. pendicular to the induction coil, so the nuclear spin precession signal is revealed by the inductive voltage on the induction coil. As shown in Figure 3.2, the alternative voltage signal from the induction coil is then analyzed by a lock-in amplifier, which is connected to the same alternative current source for B1 with the same frequency as a reference source. Though the field of permanent magnet is known and the liquid is sufficiently polarized inside it, the polarization suffers longitude and transverse decay not only when it is transferred from the magnet to the sample tube but also when it is flowing inside the sample tube. Therefore, the actual polarization is smaller than the estimation from the permanent magnet’s field. Here, the measurement of traditional NMR signal is used to calculate the spin polarization as a indirect method, since the spin polarization determines NMR signal as well as NSOR signal proportionally. In this part, the NMR signal calculation, measurement and calibration are described. 55 3.2.1 Theoretical calculation When the liquid is inside the permanent magnet for sufficiently long time, the spin is polarized. The energy difference between the spin states is very small in comparison with the average thermal energy, from the calculation of ∆E = ~ω 0 , where ω 0 is the Larmor angular frequency of 1 H spin, ω 0 = −γ · B 0 (3.7) = 267.52 · 106 rad · s−1 · T −1 × 0.85T (3.8) = 2.01 · 108 rad · s−1 (3.9) This means that the polarization degree is very small at room temperature even the sample is placed inside a superconducting magnet. the spin polarization obey the Boltzmann distribution, ρ= exp(−~ωr /kB T ) Σα,β exp(−~ωi /kB T ) (3.10) where ωα = 21 ω 0 (spin up), ωβ = − 12 ω 0 (spin down) and ωr = ωα(β) . Around temperature T ' 300 K 1 , r with 1, then exp(± k~ω )'1± BT ~ωr , kB T ~ωr kB T = 2.56·10−6 . Since ~ωr kB T is small comparing and thus 1 + 1.28 · 10−6 2 1 ρβ = − 1.28 · 10−6 2 ρα = (3.11) (3.12) in other words, the polarization difference ρ∆ = ρα − ρβ = 2.56 · 10−6 . 1 Actually, in our experiment, due to the friction of fast flowing liquid, the liquid could be heated up to 40-55 ◦ C 56 In one liter of water, there are 55.56 mol water molecules, i.e. 2 × 55.56 mol 1 H spins, hence the polarized spin density is dpol = N = 55.56mol/L × 2 × ρ∆ V = 0.284mol/m3 (3.13) (3.14) The macroscopic magnetization is determined by M= N m V H (3.15) where N/V is the density of unit magnetic moment mH of 1 H. (mH = gS µB S/~ = 14.106 · 10−27 J/T ) So M= N m V H (3.16) = 0.568mol/m3 × 14.106 · 10−27 J/T (3.17) = 2.41 · 10−3 J/(T · m3 ) (3.18) and its induced magnetic field is Bm = µ 0 M (3.19) (SI units) = 1.2566 · 10−6 H/m × 2.41 · 10−3 J/(T · m3 ) (3.20) = 3.03 · 10−9 T (3.21) From the Lenz‘s induction law, 57 ∆Φ ∆t (3.22) B · dS (3.23) V =N where the magnetic flux ZZ Φ= so assuming there is no polarization loss, the maximal induced voltage on the induction coil should be (N is loops of coils) Vmax = N · Bm · S · 2π · f0 (3.24) = 210 × 3.03 · 10−9 T × 1.767 · 10−4 m2 × 2π · f0 (3.25) = 16.0µV (when f0 = 22650Hz) (3.26) The above calculation is applied for water. In order to calculate other chemicals, it is more convenient to take in a ratio β = Vmax /dspin = 0.288 V /M , which is a constant for 1 H NMR chemicals at the same temperature, where dspin is the spin density of hydrogen nuclei with unit M (e.g. dspin = 111.1M of water). Actually, from the measurement, the NMR signal of water is 5.45µVrms by using a Lock-in amplifier, i.e. the voltage amplitude is 7.71µVamp . Hence, the effective polarization magnetic field is 0.85T · 7.71µVamp 16.0µVamp = 0.36T , which means the effective magnetic field is just 42% comparing with the maximal magnetic field. 3.2.2 NMR signal calibration For a infinitely long cylinder fulfilled with uniform magnetized material, its magnetic field distribution along the axis of the cylinder is the same. But for a magnetized cylinder with a finite length, the field distribution is not uniform at the ends of the cylinder. First of all, suppose the liquid inside the cell is uniformly magnetized, the 58 L=22.5cm 1 Magnetic field (Normalized) 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 Integ[1.5, 21.0]=19.37 Correct factor=0.993 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0 5 10 Position [cm] 15 20 Figure 3.14: Distribution of the magnetic field induced by the nuclear magnetization along the sample tube. The red color part is the region that the induction coil spans. calculated magnetic field distribution is shown in Figure 3.14, which shows that the magnetic field induced at the ends is smaller than at the central region of the cell. In previous section, the calculation is executed assuming the whole field is uniform and equal to the field value at the central region, so now the inducted magnetic field should also be calibrated according to this field distribution. Since the inducted voltage signal is the sum of all coil turns across the whole sample tube, hence the calibration could be done by comparing with the integration of magnetic field along the coil region and the measured inducted voltage. From calculation, the calibration factor of NMR signal is γc = 0.993, which could be almost ignored. 3.2.3 Polarization decay From the measurement, the time decay of polarization inside the sample tube exists, and it is approximately the same for all (1 H) chemicals concerned in this experiment. Figure 3.15 shows the inducted voltage signal that is sensed by short pick-up coils 59 at five equidistant positions (from position 1 to 5, drawn in Figure 3.9) across the long induction coil. The liquid flows from position 1 to 5, so the inducted voltage signal decay at different position in the sample tube exhibits the polarization decay in time. Position 0 and 6 is located at the ends of the sample tube (almost on the window), each of which is a dead volume for flowing liquids, hence its induced signal is significantly smaller because the polarized liquid could not be refreshed sufficiently in time. The data at the first position (position 1 in Figure 3.9) is smaller than expected, since the magnetic field induced at the end is smaller than that at the central region of the magnetized cylinder. However, the data at position 5 exhibits relatively large signal than expected, it is might because of relatively large polarization at the dead zone at the right end comparing with left dead zone, as liquid is flowing from 1 to 5 and liquid turbulence is strong at the right end. 3.2.4 Measurement of NMR In the measurement of NMR signal, the RF field is kept on with fixed frequency at 22kHz, while the B0 field at 5G is periodically turned on and off in order to distinguish the NMR signal from other electronic cross talk signal. In addition, since in practice the B1 field always have some small component along the induction coil though B1 is designed to be perpendicular to the induction coil, this undesired B1 component causes some Faraday rotation with the same frequency as NSOR signal but it is much larger. Because Faraday rotation caused by B1 is not affected by static or slow switching B0 field, the periodically switch of B0 field just marks the NSOR signal with this switch frequency and distinguish it from the Faraday rotation caused by B1 . In the experiment, B0 field is modulated on and off at 0.5 Hz. When B0 is turned on, the NMR signal reaches its maximal value; When B0 is turned off, there is almost no induction signal, because the spin-lock condition is immediately violated and then 60 0.12 SNMR/Average NMR 0.1 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.02 0 0 1 2 3 Position 4 5 6 Figure 3.15: Polarization decay of 1 H in water. Each short coil has 20 turns, about 10% of the turns of the long coil across the cell (210turns). The x axis represents the positions of the short coil. The y axis represents NMR signal of each short coil as a ratio to the signal of the long coil. The liquid flows from position 1 to 5 fluently (see Figure 3.9). The position 0 and 6 is located at the ends of the sample tube, each of which is a dead volume for flowing liquids. Except that the voltage signal at position 1 due to the fact that the magnetic field induced at the end is smaller than that at the central region of the magnetized cylinder, the signal decay from position 2 to 5. the spin is not kept precessing around the direction perpendicular to the induction coil. Therefore, as shown in Figure 3.16, when the driven current I0 for B0 is chosen to be 1670 mA so that B1 field is on resonance with the Larmor frequency, the inducted NMR signal looks like a 0.5 Hz square wave because of the simple 0.5 Hz modulation of B0 . Since the NMR signal is in a square wave form, its FFT spectrum in the frequency domain becomes a series of peaks located at 0.5 Hz, 1.5 Hz, 2.5 Hz and so on. For the spectrum of a strict square wave signal, the frequency component at 0.5 Hz is largest, and it is exactly 3 times as large as the component at 1.5 Hz. The measured spectrum at 0.5 Hz and 1.5 Hz also gives a ratio of almost 3, which is well consistent with the result for a strict square wave signal. 61 When B0 is not set for resonance, for example, I0 =1780 mA , as shown in Figure 3.17, the NMR signal is not in square wave form although B0 is still modulated on and off at 0.5 Hz. The NMR signal decays both when B0 is on and off, which means that the B1 does not lock the spin well when B0 is on, and the spin still have some coherent precession after B0 is turned off, which is very different from the resonant case. The difference of peak of bottom signal could identify its equivalent maximal NMR signal amplitude. The maximal difference is about 1.5µV, while in the resonance case it is about 5µV from Figure 3.16. The FFT analysis in the frequency domain could further distinguish these two cases. In the frequency spectrum, the nonresonant NMR signal has some magnitude of 2nd harmonics at 1 Hz, which is considerable comparing with the 3rd harmonics at 1.5 Hz, while the 2nd harmonics is negligible in the resonant case. By scanning the magnitude of I0 , a whole curve of NMR signal vs I0 could be displayed, which is used to calculate the linewidth of NMR signal, and then identify how inhomogeneous the magnetic field is. The data (red dot-line curve) in Figure 3.18 shows the NMR signal component at 0.5 Hz in the frequency spectrum. This red curve is generally in agreement with Lorentzian function [47] under near resonance condition, and it is used to calculate the linewidth according to fitting, and then identify the homogeneousness of the magnetic field. The linewidth could be simply obtained by measuring the frequency difference of the two points at which their signal is equal to half of its maximal signal. In this figure, the linewidth is about 150 mA, corresponding to a linewidth at frequency domain ∆f=1.9 kHz. The NMR signal and linewidth rely on the magnitude of B1 . The measured NMR peak signal and linewidth is plotted vs RF voltage amplitude in Figure 3.19, which shows the dependence of NMR signal and linewidth on B1 , because B1 field is linearly proportional to the RF voltage Vrf . The linewidth of NMR signal could be estimated 62 Signal (µV) −60 −65 −70 −75 0 2 FFT/µV 3 4 6 Time (s) NMR spectrum X: T=110s 8 10 2 1 0 0.5 1 1.5 Frequency/Hz 2 Figure 3.16: NMR signal in time and frequency domain at I0 =1670mA (corresponding to B0 =5.3 G), at which B1 field is on resonance with the Larmor frequency that is caused by B0 . The magnitude of B1 is 0.2 G. by the square sum of B0 field deviation and B1 intensity, due to the fact that B0 and B1 is perpendicular to each other and B1 could be considered as a deviation of B0 , r ∆ω = γ ( B1 )2 + (γB0 )2 . 2 (3.27) This expression is roughly demonstrated in Figure 3.19b. Because B0 (∼5 G) is much larger than B1 , the linewidth could only show slightly quadratic dependence on B1 (Vrf ). The signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio of traditional NMR signal is quite good. As shown in Figure 3.20, the S/N ratio is 470 after a 100-seconds measurement. Because the noise is attributed to the thermal noise and other similar to white noise, S/N is propor63 Signal (µV) −64 −65 −66 −67 0 2 FFT/µV 1 4 6 Time (s) NMR spectrum X: T=102s 8 10 0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 Frequency/Hz 2 Figure 3.17: NMR signal in time and frequency domain at I0 =1780 mA (corresponding to B0 =5.65 G). It is in nonresonant condition. The magnitude of B1 is 0.2 G. tional to the square root of measurement time √ √ T . The noise level is 0.07µV/ Hz, which is very small comparing with the signal peak at 0.5 Hz and 1.5 Hz (the 3rd harmonic). This high S/N ratio is due to the fact that sample volume is quite large, although the spin polarization is very small. 3.3 Optical rotation constant calculation The NSOR angle is proportional to the optical path, spin polarization and spin density. The NSOR rotation constant VN SOR is subjected to VN SOR · N · L · ρ∗∆ · dspin = θrot , 64 (3.28) NMR signal spectra (0.5 Hz Modulation) Amplitude (µV) 3 Data Lorentzian fitting 2 1 0 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 Current (mA) 2000 2200 2400 Figure 3.18: NMR signal at different supply current I0 . B0 is driven by I0 , and B0 is proportional to I0 . 300 3.5 250 3 Half Hight width [mA] NMR signal [µV](θ=−52.0o) 4 2.5 2 150 100 1.5 1 0 200 0.5 1 1.5 Vrf [V] (rms) 2 2.5 3 (a) NMR signal vs RF voltage Vrf . 50 0.5 Linewidth 1 1.5 2 RF Voltage(rms) [V] 2.5 (b) NMR signal linewidth vs RF voltage Vrf . Figure 3.19: Dependence of NMR signal and linewidth on RF voltage. B1 field is driven by the RF source and its magnitude is linearly proportional to the RF voltage Vrf . 65 3 NMR spectrum X: T=100s 4 NMR signal X= 5.16 µV (0.50, 3.29) (1.50, 1.10) 3.5 S/ N = 470 FFT/µV 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 Frequency/Hz 1.4 1.6 1.8 Figure 3.20: NMR signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio. The S/N ratio is 470 after a 100seconds to the square root of measurement √ measurement. This ratio is proportional √ time T . The noise level is 0.07µV/ Hz, which is very small comparing with the signal peak at 0.5 Hz and 1.5 Hz. where N is the multipass number, L is the effective length of a single-pass optical path (equal to the effective length of the sample tube), dspin is the nuclear spin density, andρ∗∆ is the actual polarization, which could be calculate from measured NMR signal indirectly, ρ∗∆ = Vnmr /γc · ρ∆ Vmax (3.29) where Vnmr is the measured NMR induction signal, Vmax is the theoretical maximal NMR signal, γc is the calibration constant, ρ∆ is the polarization assuming there is no polarization decay after the liquid is polarized inside the permanent magnet. As a whole, NSOR constant VN SOR could be expressed based on the measured optical rotation angle θ and NMR induced signal Vnmr : 66 NMR spectrum X: T=12000s 4 NMR signal X= 4.64 µV (0.50, 2.95) (1.50, 0.95) 2 1 0 0.5 0 1 1.5 Frequency/Hz X Rotation spectrum FFT/µV FFT/µV 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.5 1 Frequency/Hz 0 1.5 0.5 1 Frequency(Hz) φ Y (10 − 9rad) (10 − 9rad) 0.5 1 Frequency/Hz 1.5 15 X Rotation angle = 1.09 nrad (0.50, 0.70) (1.50, 0.69) <Noise> = 0.52 nrad φ X 15 0 1 1.5 Frequency/Hz Y Rotation spectrum √ !Noise "=1.2µ V/ Hz 0.3 !Noise "=1.2µ V/ Hz 0.2 5 0.5 0.4 √ 0.3 10 2 1 0.4 0 NMR signal Y= 0.09 µV (0.50, 0.06) (1.50, 0.02) 3 FFT/µV 3 FFT/µV NMR spectrum Y 4 10 5 0 1.5 Y Rotation angle = 23.45 nrad (0.50, 14.93) (1.50, 4.90) <Noise> = 0.52 nrad 0.5 1 Frequency(Hz) 1.5 Figure 3.21: Comparison of NMR and Optical rotation signal spectrum for water. The lock-in phase is adjusted that the Y component of NMR signal is vanished. Subfigure a) and b) is the X and Y component of NMR signal. c) and d) is the optical rotation spectrum expressed in direct voltage signal µV, while e) and f) is the optical rotation spectrum after the signal is converted to rotation angle unit rad. VN SOR = θrot Vmax γc × × Vnmr dspin N · L · ρ∆ (3.30) Figure 3.21 shows the comparison of NMR and optical rotation signal spectrum of 1 H in water. The lock-in phase is adjusted that the Y component of NMR signal is vanished. Subfigure a) and b) is the X and Y component of NMR signal. c) and 67 d) is the optical rotation spectrum expressed in direct voltage signal µV, while e) and f) is the optical rotation spectrum after the signal is converted to rotation angle unit rad. From the figure, we can see that the noise signal-to-noise ratio in optical rotation spectrum is much smaller than the traditional NMR spectrum. In addition, the phase of optical rotation and NMR spectrum has a 90◦ phase difference. Because the traditional NMR detection is based on induction law, so it will produce a 90◦ phase delay, while the optical rotation is has the same phase as the RF field. The feedback resistor that is used in the photodiode operational amplifier circuit (see Figure 5.13) is of 93.4 KΩ, and the sum of balanced DC output voltage is 10.4 V, √ at temperature T=300 K, the shot noise is 0.6 µV/ Hz and the Johnson noise is 2 √ nV/ Hz, so the shot noise dominates in this measurement. The measured noise level √ of the optical rotation spectrum is about 1.2 µV/ Hz, which is about twice as large as the shot-noise level. The extra noise is attributed to the optical path fluctuation due to the liquid flow and dusts. A smaller noise level could be achieved when the multipass pattern is very stable and the liquid is pure enough. 3.4 Comparison of Signal-to-Noise ratio 68 4 NMR spectrum: T=1000s Optical rotation spectrum: T=1000s S/N=1481 3 0.5 Signal/µV Signal/µV S/N=10 0.6 2 0.4 0.3 0.2 1 0.1 0 0.4 0.45 0.5 0.55 Frequency/Hz 0 0.4 0.6 0.45 0.5 0.55 Frequency/Hz 0.6 Figure 3.22: Comparison of signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio between the traditional NMR signal (via pick-up coil) and optical rotation signal. Sample: water. Measurement time: 1000 seconds. As far, the NSOR signal has a much worse signal-to-noise ratio than that of the traditional NMR signal. As shown in Figure 3.22, for a 1000 second measurement of the same sample 1 H in water and other condition, the S/N of traditional NMR spectrum is as large as 1481, while it is only about 10 for the optical rotation spectrum. So the S/N ratio of the NSOR measurement is a crucial limitation for its applications in practice. In the traditional NMR, the signal is larger for nuclei with higher gyromagnetic ratio, 1 H has the largest gyromagnetic ratio, while other heavier magnetic nuclei has a much smaller gyromagnetic ratio. Therefore, the traditional NMR spectroscopy prefers organic molecules, due to its high sensitivity for 1 H, and 1 H is the most common elements in organics molecules. Unlike the traditional NMR spectroscopy, NSOR signal is enhanced for heavier magnetic nuclei because their hyperfine interaction is roughly proportional to the atomic number Z, while 1 H has a smallest NSOR signal. 69 3.5 Faraday rotation (Verdet constant) When a bulk of nuclear spins is precessing, the induced magnetic field BM can be divided into a local contact field and a distant dipolar field. The local contact interaction can be enhanced or suppressed depending on the overlap of the wavefunction of the virtual electron excitation created by the laser and the nuclear spin. This effect could also be treated as hyperfine interaction between the nuclei and electrons, so a molecular or atomic with a large hyperfine interaction could give a large optical rotation signal. The distant dipolar field just lead to a regular Faraday rotation, so if there is no local contact interaction, the magnetic field that is induced by the processing polarized spin could also cause optical rotation. For water, the NSOR signal is very close to the regular Faraday rotation, which means that the local contact enhancement is negligible. For other chemicals that are used in this experiment, the enhancement is considerable. Therefore, NSOR constant is compared with Verdet constant in regular Faraday rotation to illustrate the NSOR enhancement. The Verdet constant could be obtained from standard reference data, which is used to indicate the Faraday rotation in the medium under magnetic field. Since the unit of Verdet constant is µrad/(G · cm), it is necessary to convert this unit to µrad/(M · cm), which is used for the NSOR. Based on the relation B = µ0 · mH · where N V N , V (3.31) is the polarization density with unit mol/m3 , and it is assumed that the spin polarization is 100%. Therefore, the unit conversion constant (for proton) from µrad/(G · cm) to µrad/(M · cm) is σ = µ · mH · mol · 1000 · 10000 = 0.1067 70 (3.32) Substance Vd [µrad/(G · cm)]† Water 8.67 Methanol 6.33 Ethanol 7.37 Propanol 7.89 Isopropanol 8.15 Hexene 9.28 n-Hexane 7.89 Cyclohexane 9.71 Vd [µrad/(M · cm))] 0.93 0.68 0.79 0.84 0.87 0.99 0.84 1.04 Table 3.2: Verdet constant of chemicals (µrad/(M · cm)) from reference. † Cf. International Critical Tables of Numerical Data, Physics, Chemistry and Technology, Washburn, 1926-1933. In the original reference database, there is no data for 405nm laser, so the above Verdet constants are interpolated from known value at other wavelengths. For example, the Verdet constant of water is Vd = 8.67µrad/(G · cm), so it could be also written in σ · Vd = 0.1067 · 8.67 = 0.925µrad/(M · cm). Because Verdet constants from reference data [62] is not measured for the wavelength 405nm that is used in this experiment, we can only get interpolated value based on some empirical formula. It is better to measure the Verdet constant in a simple experiment setup that is similar to NSOR detection. The measurement apparatus is shown in Figure 3.23. All the instruments, the sample tube, the coil and other related conditions are the same as used in the NSOR experiment in Figure 3.2, but it is much simpler, because the regular Faraday rotation could be measured in static liquids, and the inductive pick-up coil is changed to acting as a magnetic field coil which creates a uniform field along the axis of the sample tube. The measured results of Verdet constant is shown in Table 3.3. 71 Lock-in Amplifier Function generator 1KHz DAQ PD2 Current Source PD1 PBS Laser Diode 405nm Coil Faraday rotation measurement Figure 3.23: Apparatus for Faraday rotation measurement. All the instruments, the sample tube, the coil and other related conditions are the same, but it is much simpler, because the regular Faraday rotation could be measured in static liquids, and the induction NMR coil is changed to acting as a magnetic field coil which creates a uniform field along the axis of the sample tube. Substance Vd [µrad/(G · cm)]† Water 8.67 Methanol 6.33 Ethanol 7.37 Propanol 7.89 Isopropanol 8.15 Hexene 9.28 n-Hexane 7.89 Cyclohexane 9.71 Vd [µrad/(G · cm)](measured) 8.28 5.83 7.05 7.38 7.65 9.15 7.51 7.68 Table 3.3: Comparison of measured value and referenced value of Verdet constant (µrad/(M · cm)) 72 Chapter 4 Experimental results and calculations under low fields In this chapter, the data of Nuclear Spin induced Optical Rotation (NSOR) of 1 H in various pure organic liquids at a low magnetic field (5 Gauss) are shown and analyzed, as well as the comparison of NSOR of 1 H and 19 F. It is found that experimental NSOR signals do not scale with the Verdet constant of the chemicals studied, but provide unique information about the nuclear chemical environment. From the data, we propose an empirical rule based on electronegativity to distinguish 1 H NSOR in carbon-hydrogen and oxygen-hydrogen groups among different organic chemicals. Furthermore, in order to carry out quantitative computations of NSOR in various chemicals, first-principle calculations are implemented to calculate NSOR constants, obtaining qualitative agreement with measured data. 4.1 NSOR of 1H in various chemicals Based on the experiment setup, we make some choices of organic chemicals for investigation. First, the chemicals for consideration should be in liquid states around room temperature, and its boiling point is above 50◦ C, because the liquid will be heated 73 up to 50◦ C when the pump is circulating liquid flow for continuous polarization via a magnet. In addition, the viscosity of liquid should be small enough, otherwise the pump could not drive the liquid with enough power. Second, the chemicals should be relatively safe, i.e. not too toxic, carcinogenic or corrosive, as the current experiment setup requires about 1 liter of liquid for continuous running, while the usage of bulk dangerous liquid might cause some safety issues. Third, the chemicals should have low absorption coefficients around the laser wavelength 405nm; otherwise the light transmission is too low for detection after passing through several meters; therefore, most colorful organic liquids with significant absorptions in the visible region are not considered, as well as some chemicals having near-UV resonant absorptions. Based on these criteria, we only consider eight chemicals: water, Ethanol, Methanol, nHexane, Cyclohexane, Hexene, Propanol and Isopropanol, all of which are common liquids used in chemistry. In these chemicals, the comparison of water, ethanol and methanol is used to explore the difference of carbon-hydrogen and oxygen-hydrogen, while ethanol and methanol further have some differences in carbon-hydrogen constitution. The group of n-Hexane, Cyclohexane and Hexene are pure carbon-hydrogen chemicals with similar structure. Propanol and Isopropanol are also considered, since they are a pair of isomers with minor difference in alcohol group position. We also try to measure Toluene and Benzil alcohol, which are aromatic chemicals that normally having relatively high Verdet constant, however their absorption coefficients are not low enough, and their high refractive indices further reduce the light transmission at the interface of liquid and window, thereby giving extremely low signal-noise ratio, so we have not obtained reliable data for these aromatic chemicals. Basic physical properties of these chemicals, such as density, refractive index, viscosity and boiling point, are listed in Table 4.1, where the Perfluorohexane is also shown, as it is used to measure NSOR of 19 F nuclei in the next section. 74 75 Substance Formula Water H2 O Ethanol CH3 CH2 OH Methanol CH3 OH n-Hexane CH3(CH2)4CH3 Cyclohexane (CH2 )6 Hexene CH3 (CH2 )3 CHCH2 Propanol CH3 CH2 CH2 OH Isopropanol CH3 CH(OH)CH3 Toluene C6 H5 CH3 Benzil alcohol C6 H5 CH2 OH Perfluorohexane C6 F14 1 H(or 19 F) number 2 6 4 14 12 12 8 8 8 8 14 M weight Density(g/ml) Refractive index 18.01 1.000 1.3432(405nm) 46.07 0.789 1.3610 32.04 0.792 1.3314 86.18 0.655 1.3749 84.16 0.779 1.4262 84.16 0.673 1.3879 60.10 0.803 1.3854 60.10 0.786 1.3776 92.14 0.865 1.4960 108.14 1.045 1.5390 338.04 1.681 1.2520 Viscosity(mPa·s) 0.894 1.070 0.544 0.294 0.930 0.510 1.938 1.960 0.560 5.470 0.660 Melting/Boiling point(◦ C) 0.0 / 100 -114 / 78 -98 / 64.7 -95 / 68.7 5.5 / 80.7 -140 / 63 -127 / 97 -89 / 82 -93 / 110.5 -14 / 204 -90 / 56 Table 4.1: Physical properties of chemicals for investigation in this work. Density, Refractive index and viscosity are all reference data under standard condition, i.e. 25◦ C, 1 atm. Refractive index is reference data measured with 587nm laser (data of water is measured with 405nm laser). F H 19 1 Nucleus As described in Section 3.1, the optical rotation signal is measured with a balanced polarimeter shown in Figure 3.12, and thereby obtain the NSOR angle ΦN . The NSOR constant VN is calculated from the NSOR angle ΦN by dividing by the optical path length L, the molar density of nuclear spins n, and the nuclear spin polarization P = hIN i /IN ;VN = ΦN SOR /(nLP ). Here the actual spin polarization P is deduced from the measurement of traditional NMR signal, as described in Section 3.2. Here, results of NSOR are normalized to nA = 1 M, L = 1 cm, and fully polarized nuclei. The original NSOR data, which are rotation angles divided by the traditional NMR signal in unit of nrad/µV, are shown in Table 4.2, where water is measured for more times than other chemicals, because its transmission is relatively higher and it is periodically used to check the long-term stability of the apparatus. The measured data need to be calibrated by two factors. The first calibration originates from edge effects of the induction coil when sensing the traditional NMR signal. For a uniformly magnetized cylinder, the magnetic field in the central part is the most uniform, but fields at two ends of the cylinder are reduced about a half. Hence the induced voltage signal on the coil should be calibrated, which has been explained in Section 3.2. This calibration applied on the induced voltage signal is V’=0.993*V, which has incorporated the facts that the coil are not extended to the ends of the cylinder while both ends of the cylinder are not fully polarized. In addition, in the multi-pass configuration, the light reflection may introduces some part of circular polarization, i.e. polarization impurity caused by multiple mirror reflections, which could not be analyzed by the polarization beam splitter, therefore the direct measured rotation signal is attenuated a bit. Because the measurement of NSOR have the same multi-pass configuration and other optical components as the regular Faraday rotation measurement, we can compare the data of multi-pass Faraday rotation with single-pass Faraday rotation and then obtain the calibration factor. It is found that measurements of V in a single-pass geometry are larger by 8.3% compared to multi76 pass geometry, so we applied a +8.3% correction to all optical rotation data in the 0 multi-pass geometry, VN =(1+8.30%)·VN . The NSOR were measured several times for each liquid, with periodic calibration by water NSOR measurements to check the long-term stability of the apparatus. In addition to the statistical error we assign a systematic error of 5% to each measurement, which accounts for observed long-term changes in the signal amplitudes. We also find that our measured V are on average 5% smaller than literature values at 405 nm [62, 63, 64]. NSOR is composed of two parts: the short-distance hyperfine interaction induced optical rotation θN , and the regular Faraday rotation θd arising from the magnetic field inside a magnetized medium. Therefore, if there is no short-distance hyperfine interaction induced optical rotation, or this effect is negligible, the polarized spin ensemble could still induce a magnetic field in the medium, thereby creating regular Faraday optical rotation. In order to show the optical rotation enhancement arising from short-distance hyperfine interactions, we need to compare NSOR to Faraday rotation. We scale the Verdet constant by the classical magnetic field B = µ0 mN nA generated in a long cylinder, where mN is the nuclear magnetic moment and nA is the number of polarized nuclei. All the measured NSOR constants (VN ) and Faraday rotation Verdet constants (Vd , measured by single-pass configuration), are listed in Table 4.3, where the standard Faraday rotation Verdet constants (Vr ) are also shown as a reference. NSOR constants are scaled to 1 M concentration of fully polarized nuclei and Verdet constants are also expressed in units of µrad/M · cm using the magnetic field generated by 1 M of polarized nuclei. The single-pass measurement of Faraday rotation Verdet constants are quite stable with small statistical error, plus with some small systematic error due to the alignment of the light beam and the sample tube. All the data are also plotted in Figure 4.1. 77 78 Substance Measured optical rotation [nrad/µV] Water 4.82 5.16 5.09 4.80 4.81 4.66 4.62 4.95 5.22 5.03 4.90 5.10 Ethanol 9.97 10.37 10.29 Methanol 8.32 8.31 7.57 7.74 7.75 7.73 8.10 n-Hexane 11.06 11.13 11.98 12.39 12.15 Cyclohexane 11.42 12.38 12.44 11.95 11.64 11.91 12.46 11.58 11.51 Hexene 10.30 10.27 10.03 Propanol 10.12 10.16 10.34 10.65 10.16 10.34 Isopropanol 10.01 10.14 10.07 Perfluorohexane 69.33 67.37 69.90 69.50 Mean Std% 4.93 3.94 10.21 2.07 7.93 3.86 11.74 5.19 11.92 3.49 10.20 1.45 10.30 1.93 10.07 0.65 69.03 1.64 Table 4.2: Original measured data of nuclear spin induced optical rotation. The data shown are rotation angles divided by the traditional NMR signal, so they are proportional to NSOR constants. F H 19 1 Nucleus Substance Water(1 H) Methanol(1 H) Ethanol(1 H) Propanol(1 H) Isopropanol(1 H) Hexene(1 H) Hexane(1 H) Cyclohexane(1 H) Perfluorohexane(19 F ) VN [µrad/(M · cm)] Vd [µrad/(M · cm)] Vr [µrad/(M · cm)] 0.94±0.05 0.88 0.94 1.52±0.08 0.62 0.66 1.96±0.10 0.75 0.78 1.97±0.10 0.79 0.83 1.93±0.10 0.82 0.86 1.96±0.10 0.98 1.01 2.25±0.12 0.80 0.84 2.29±0.11 0.82 0.86 13.23±0.67 0.23 - Table 4.3: Measured NSOR constant (VN ), Faraday rotation Verdet constant (Vd ) and a reference value of Verdet constant (Vr ) of 1 H (from water to cyclohexane) and 19 F (in perfluorohexane). NSOR constants are scaled to 1 M concentration of fully polarized nuclei and Verdet constants are also expressed in units of µrad/M · cm using the magnetic field generated by 1 M of polarized nuclei. The reference data of Verdet constant are obtained from empirical dispersion relation based on the data of other wavelengths, while the reference data at 405nm is not shown there,† Cf. International Critical Tables of Numerical Data, Physics, Chemistry and Technology, Washburn, 1926-1933. Referenced data of perfluorohexane is not found yet. From the data in Table 4.3 and Figure 4.1, for water, the Faraday rotation almost accounts for all of the NSOR signal, in agreement with previous work in reference [25]. For other chemicals, the NSOR constants are enhanced relative to the scaled Verdet constants by a factor greater than 2, indicating that hyperfine interactions play a large role in NSOR. The data for water, methanol, and ethanol are generally consistent with earlier first-principle theoretical calculations[34]. The enhancement of NSOR for 1 H bound to carbon can be explained qualitatively by smaller electronegativity of carbon compared with that of oxygen. The electronegativity using the Pauling scale of H, C and O is 2.2, 2.55 and 3.44 respectively [65, 66]. For example, in water H2 O, both 1 H are bonded with the oxygen nucleus, then the electrons are pulled to oxygen nucleus due to the fact that the electronegativity of H is much smaller than O. Since the short-distance hyperfine interaction induced optical rotation in NSOR is quite sensitive to the distance between the electrons and nuclei, the NSOR enhancement in water may be reduced so much that it could be negligible in measurement, which 79 3 Verdet constant Ref Verdet constant NSOR constant 2.5 µrad/(cm⋅M) 2 1.5 1 he xa an C yc lo ex H ne e e en n− H ex no l Is op ro pa an ol l op no Pr Et ha no ha et M W at er 0 l 0.5 Figure 4.1: 1 H NSOR constants VN (cross points and error bars), scaled Faraday rotation Verdet constants Vd (diamonds) from our measurements and scaled reference Verdet constants (blue dots). All measurements of NSOR constants are shown for all chemicals to indicate the degree of experimental scatter. leads to that the Faraday rotation of water is almost equal to the NSOR signal. On the other hand, the electronegativity of C is close to H, which results in greater overlap of the electronic wave function with 1 H nuclei in CH2 and CH3 groups, giving a larger hyperfine interaction than the OH group. First-principle calculations of optical rotation constant of individual 1 H in CH2, CH3 and OH groups in ethanol, as shown in Figure 4.2, agree with this explanation very well. Because the NSOR signal measured under low magnetic fields is a averaged value of all 1 H nuclei in a molecule, as it is not able to distinguish different 1 H through chemical shift at low fields, the molecules with OH bonds exhibit a smaller NSOR constant than the molecules without OH bond. This could further explain that NSOR of n-Hexane and Cyclohexane, which is only composed of CH2 or CH3 groups, is larger than water, Methanol, Ethanol, Propanol and Isopropanol. The data of Hexene is close to Propanol and Isopropanol, 80 1 Methyl group Methylene group Alcohol group 0.6 0.4 N V [µrad/(M cm)] 0.8 0.2 0 400 600 800 1000 Wavelength [nm] 1200 1400 Figure 4.2: Calculated NSOR constant (VN ) of individual 1 H in different groups in ethanol as a function of laser wavelength. These first-principle calculations are based on DFT methods with the BHandHLYP/co-2 level for a single molecule, and the bulk field effect (regular Faraday rotation in the macroscopic medium) is not included. Experimentally equivalent nuclei are averaged. Reproduced from reference [34]. since the C=C bond have a larger electronegativity than C-C bond. The significant difference between Methanol and Ethanol is probably due to the difference of the fraction of CH3 , because Hydrogen in O-CH3 has smaller attraction force than that in C-CH3. Of course, this empirical explanation based on classical electronegativity theory could only provide a qualitative explanation. In Section 4.3, a quantitative calculation based on first-principle calculations will be given, 4.2 Comparison of 19 F and 1H Theory and calculations[25, 31, 34] predicted that NSOR in heavy nuclei are normally larger than light nuclei, since in heavier atoms the contact term enhancement generally increases with the atomic number Z, which was also verified experimentally in 129 Xe[25] and 19 F[29]. Therefore, molecules with heavier magnetic nuclei attract 81 more interests of applications of NSOR in chemistry. Due to the limitations in current low-field experiment setup, most of the other heavy nuclei are not applicable, e.g. lithium(7 Li) and other magnetic metal ions solutions do not have enough spin polarization density, condensed phosphoric (31 P) acid is too viscous for running, and the natural abundances of 13 C, 15 N and 17 O are too small and their polarization relaxation time is quite short. The most applicable substance is Fluorine organic liquids, since its gyromagnetic ratio allows high enough spin polarization density, and its coherence time in liquids is about 1∼10 seconds, which also allows the liquids flowing through sample tube without serious polarization loss. The first experiment of 19 F in perfluorohexane(C6 F14 ) and hexafluorobenzene(C6 F6 ) was explored in reference [29] at high magnetic fields, but the signal-noise ratio (SNR) is relatively weak due to the short optical path and other detection noise. Here, we carry out the measurement of 19 F in perfluorohexane under low mag- netic fields with help of multi-pass cavity and short wavelength (405nm), obtaining a relatively higher SNR. In Figure 4.3, we compare the optical rotation spectrum of 1 H in C6 H14 and 19 F in C6 F14 after 1000 seconds of integration, where the SNR is about 16 and 24 for 1 H in C6 H14 and 19 F in C6 F14 respectively. Since the spin polarization ratio of 19 F in C6 F14 deduced from traditional NMR signal and spin density are much smaller than 1 H in C6 H14 , the measured NSOR constants for 19 F is a factor of 6 larger than in hydrocarbons, while the Faraday rotation Verdet constant is a factor of 3.5 smaller (see Table 4.3), consistent with earlier measurements of the Verdet constant in fluorocarbons[29]. Therefore, the NSOR constant of 19 F in C6 F14 enhanced the optical rotation due to the Faraday effect by a factor of about 57, which is partly due to stronger hyperfine interaction in heavier atoms and partly due to high electronegativity of fluorine atoms. Other heavy nuclei, such as 205 Tl, 207 Pb and 133 Cs, are expected to have much higher NSOR constants, which will be investigated in the future. 82 Opti cal Rotati on ( nrad /mHz1/ 2 ) Opti cal Rotati on ( nrad /mHz1/ 2 ) 40 100 30 20 10 0 0.4 0.5 Frequency (Hz) 0.6 80 60 40 20 0 0.4 0.5 0.6 Frequency (Hz) Figure 4.3: Nuclear spin optical rotation spectrum of 1 H in C6 H14 and 19 F in C6 F14 after 1000 seconds of integration. Since B0 field is modulated on and off the resonance at 0.5 Hz, the signal appears at this frequency. The SNR is about 16 and 24 for 1 H in C6 H14 and 19 F in C6 F14 respectively. 4.3 Theoretical calculation In this section, the theoretical calculations for NSOR constants is described, as qualitative agreement with measured data is obtained with first-principles calculations using density-functional theory (DFT)[67] calibrated against ab initio coupled cluster with single and double operators (CCSD)[68] data. The following calculation is done by Ikäläinen and Vaara according to the collaboration with our experiments. As sketched in Section 2.3, the NSOR constant VN can be calculated through the rotationally and ensemble-averaged antisymmetric polarizability [45, 69, 32, 34], e3 ~ µ20 1X `N,ν 1 γN ετ ν Imhhr ; rτ , 3 iiω,0 , VN = − ωnA cIN 2 me 4π 6 τ ν rN (4.1) where ω is the frequency, IN is the nuclear spin, γN is the gyromagnetic ratio, and ετ ν is the Levi-Civita symbol. This expression is in terms of quadratic response theory [70], involving time-dependent electric dipole interaction with the light beam taken 83 to second order, and the static hyperfine interaction HNPSO = X `iN e~ µ0 γN IN · 3 me 4π riN i (4.2) between the nuclear magnetic moment µN = γN ~IN and the electrons, involving the electronic angular momentum about nucleus N , `N . For heavy-atom systems such as liquid Xe, relativistic formulation should be employed [35]. In the present systems that only include light nuclei (1 H, C and O) the non-relativistic form (Equation 4.1) is sufficient. Equation 4.1 does not include the long-range magnetic interactions between molecules, as discussed in Reference [33]. For a long cylindrical sample the longrange field equals B = 1 3 µ0 M , resulting in an additional regular Faraday rotation. Hence, a bulk inter -molecular correction VB given by 1 VB = nA µ0 µN V, 3 (4.3) should be added to VN to be fully comparable to the experimental results. In order to calculate the antisymmetric polarizability, optimized geometries of the molecules were first obtained with the Gaussian software [71] at the B3LYP/aug-ccpVTZ level, while the Dalton program [72] was used to calculate NSOR constants at 405 nm. When running Dalton program, implementations of quadratic response functions were employed for the Hartree-Fock (HF), density-functional theory (DFT), and coupled-cluster (CC) methods from reference [73, 74, 75] respectively. DFT was used to obtain results of predictive quality for larger molecules. Therefore, its performance was assessed through more accurate but also more time-consuming ab initio CC singles and doubles (CCSD) calculations for water, methanol, ethanol, propanol and isopropanol. The DFT functionals BHandHLYP(50%), B3LYP (20%), and BLYP (0%) were used, where the percentages denote the amount of exact HF exchange 84 admixture, which has been often seen to be the factor controlling DFT accuracy for hyperfine properties [76, 34]. In addition, novel and compact sc. completenessoptimized (co) basis sets [77] were used to furnish near-basis-set limit results for VN , which requires an accurate description of the electronic structure both at the nuclear sites and at the outskirts of the electron cloud. This is due to the involvement of both the magnetic hyperfine and electric dipole operators. The efficiency of co sets for magnetic properties has been verified in several studies [77, 78, 34, 35, 79]. The co-2 set (10s7p3d primitive functions for C-O; 10s7p3d for H) was developed in Reference [78] for laser-induced 13 C shifts in hydrocarbons. The carbon exponents [78] are used here also for oxygen. Co-0 (C-O: 12s10p4d1f , H: 8s8p5d) was generated in Reference [79] for basis-set-converged NSOR for first-row main-group systems, as calibrated by 1 H and 19 FSOR calculations for the FH molecule. To calculate VB , the Faraday rotation Verdet constants were calculated at the BHandHLYP/co-2 and B3LYP/co-2 levels for all molecules, as well as at the CCSD/co-2 level for water, methanol, ethanol, propanol, and isopropanol. NSOR constants computed with the co-2 basis were combined with VN obtained with co-0, as the former property is not as sensitive to the basis-set quality as NSOR. Figure 4.4 shows the calculated NSOR via various methods with two basis sets, where all the data are weighted averages over all 1 H and 19 F nuclei of the molecules. In most cases, the use of a basis set with higher quality leads to larger VN . The only exception is water, where no systematic change is observed. Perfluorohexane shows a difference of 10% between the two basis sets, while for the other molecules, the percentage ranges from 20–50%. In all cases other than perfluorohexane, the calculated intramolecular NSOR in Equation 4.1 is smaller than the experimental result. After adding the bulk correction VB , the agreement of BHandHLYP/co-0 and B3LYP/co-0 data with experiment is improved (see Figure 4.4), apart from the exaggerated B3LYP results for perfluorohexane and water. However, the use of BHandHLYP/co-0 for wa85 Figure 4.4: VN for all molecules at the B3LYP/co-2 and B3LYP/co-0 levels of theory, as well as VN with the bulk (intramolecular) correction for B3LYP/co-0 and BHandHLYP/co-0. CCSD/co-2 data is given for the smaller molecules. Experimental values with error limits are also shown. Results for perfluorohexane are divided by a factor of six. ter results in a good agreement with the measurements, both due to the reduced intramolecular NSOR contribution as well as the more realistic V obtained at the BHandHLYP level. For the larger molecules, the experimental values are reproduced qualitatively. A detailed analysis would necessitate the incorporation of solvation and intramolecular dynamics effects via molecular dynamics simulations [79]. In the case of perfluorohexane, the known issues [76] of the present DFT functionals with the hyperfine properties of 19 F may contribute to the observed overestimation. Furthermore, the calculation for individual H in a group(Supporting information in Reference [36]) reveals that the largest NSOR occur in the CH2 groups, while the hydroxyl OH groups display distinctly smaller values than either the methyl or 86 87 Basis co-2 co-0 co-2 co-0 co-0 co-2 co-0 co-0 co-2 co-0 co-2 co-0 co-2 Water Methanol Ethanol Propanol Isopropanol Hexene Hexanea Cyclohexane Perfluorohexane 0.45 0.92 1.05 1.11 1.14 1.26 1.26 1.25 10.08 0.50 1.22 1.36 1.42 1.43 1.56 1.55 1.57 10.38 0.62 0.95 1.09 1.15 1.22 1.31 1.36 1.29 11.98 0.64 1.24 1.39 1.46 1.51 1.60 1.69 1.62 12.53 0.91 1.40 1.57 1.64 1.73 1.87 1.89 1.81 12.59 0.86 0.99 1.04 1.20 1.33 1.37 1.44 1.34 14.29 0.85 1.28 1.44 1.51 1.62 1.68 1.78 1.69 16.00 1.21 1.46 1.65 1.73 1.89 1.98 2.01 1.90 16.07 1.19 1.03 1.16 1.24 1.46 1.46 1.52 1.40 17.19 1.15 1.32 1.47 1.55 1.75 1.75 1.88 1.70 19.35 0.73 0.89 1.05 1.12 1.20 – – – – 0.75 –b – – – – – – – 1.03 c 1.05 1.24 1.32 1.43 – – – – 0.94±0.05 1.52±0.08 1.96±0.10 1.97±0.10 1.93±0.10 1.96±0.10 2.25±0.12 2.29±0.11 13.23±0.67 Table 4.4: Calculated NSOR (VN ) [in µrad/(M · cm)] at 405 nm using the HF, DFT, and CCSD methods and the basis sets co-0 and co-2. For B3LYP/co-0 and CCSD/co-2 levels of theory, bulk-corrected values are given. Experimental data is also provided. a The most diffuse d-type function for hydrogen has been omitted in the co-0 basis used for hexane. b Not calculated due to program limitations. c The CCSD/co-0 + bulk result equals 1.05 µrad/(M·cm). CCSD + bulk Exp. CCSD B3LYP + bulk BLYP BhandHLYP + bulk B3LYP BHandHLYP Method HF methylene groups for all molecules. This supports the electronegativity argument for the relatively small VN in water. In perfluorohexane, however, the CF3 -group feature a larger VN than the CF2 group. The different methylene groups in propanol and hexane, as well as the axial and equatorial hydrogens in cyclohexane give similar results. Alteration in the magnitude of VN is observed for the CH2 groups in hexene. The values for 1 H in the methyl groups are rather similar for all the molecules, with isopropanol and hexane giving slightly larger NSOR than the other systems. The VN appropriate to the hydroxyl groups differs between the molecules, with ethanol and propanol giving very small signals. In hexene, the cis-type hydrogen shows a larger rotation than the other protons situated next to the double bond. In summary, we find that experimental NSOR signals do not scale with the Verdet constant of the chemicals studied, but provide unique information about the nuclear chemical environment. Qualitative agreement with measured data is obtained with first-principles calculations using DFT calibrated against ab initio CCSD data. Hybrid DFT with 20% or 50% exact exchange is found to produce results closest to experiment. The 1 H NSOR is able to clearly distinguish hydroxyl group from methyl and methylene groups. Future application of these techniques to more complicated molecules can provide unique new information about their conformation and electronic state. 88 Chapter 5 NSOR experiments under high magnetic fields In the NSOR experiment under low magnetic fields, all the signal are averaged values of the same nuclei (e.g. 1 H) in a molecule, so it is impossible to distinguish the nuclei in different groups in the same molecule. It is necessary to measure NSOR under high magnetic fields, since it provides capability of chemical shifts and thereby it is possible to measure the NSOR constants of the same type of nuclei in different groups. Besides, under high fields, there are several aspects that could promote the measurement of NSOR as follows. (1) High magnetic fields not only exhibit chemical shifts among different functional groups, but also could reach a higher polarization ratio for the material, as the net population ratio of polarized nuclear spin is approximately proportional to the magnetic field B0 around room temperature, ρ∆ = ~γN B0 2kB T (5.1) where γN is the nuclear gyromagnetic ratio, kB is the Boltzmann constant, and T is the temperature. On the other hand, the NSOR signal is also proportional to the 89 spin polarization ratio. Therefore, the increment of magnetic fields could enhance the NSOR signal linearly. Unlike the situation in low-field setup, in which the nuclear spins are prepolarized in a external magnet and then adiabatically transferred to the low field region resulting with serious polarization loss, the spin polarization under high fields could be maintained without loss, since the sample is placed statically inside the magnet while B0 serves as the polarization field as well as the precessing field simultaneously. Under a high magnetic field, normally 1∼10 Tesla in a superconducting magnet, the polarization could reach maximal efficiency, and the pulsed NMR technique could be executed continuously with high repetition in aid of the long-time integration of signals. The only concern under high magnetic field is the field homogeneity, because the sample for investigation always possesses some finite volume and a small field inhomogeneity among this volume will deteriorate the coherence time, leading to the signal linewidth broadening and then make the chemical shift less distinguishable. Current first-principle calculations could calculate the NSOR constants for single nuclei in a specific functional group, and NSOR enhancement of each group with chemical shift also attracts interests in the area of chemical analysis, hence we aim to setup the apparatus for NSOR measurement under high fields. (2) Second, performing high-field experiments makes it possible to measure the NSOR of many heavy magnetic nuclei, while it is not unachievable under low fields. As already stated in Section 4.2, except some organic liquids containing 1 H and 19 F for investigation, most magnetic nuclei could not be measured successfully at low fields, under which it requires long coherence time, high enough polarization and low toxicity for bulk usage. Common magnetic nuclei, such as 207 13 C, 17 O, 14 N, 31 P, 29 Si, Pb and so on, are not detectable regarding NSOR under low fields. For example, although the relaxation time T1 of 13 C is about several seconds, the abundance of 13 C is only 1.1% and its gyromagnetic ratio is also much smaller than 1 H, which leads to very small spin polarization. 17 O has a rather short T1 ∼0.02s, so it could not keep 90 polarization for enough time for continuous-wave NMR measurement. Some solutions of metal ion salts, e.g. 7 Li, 109 Ag, 207 Pb, could not reach high spin density, then the spin polarization is not high enough for measurements beyond noise level. Although 31 P is also a good candidate for investigation, the liquid condensed H3 PO4 is too viscous to flow quickly for continuous prepolarization in current low-field experiment setup. Under high fields, most of the above issues are not a problem, as the sample do not need to flow, the polarization is higher than under low fields, and pulsed NMR is capable of measure the magnetic nuclei with short T1 and T2 . In summary, NSOR of most magnetic nuclei are expected to be measured, as long as the signal could surpass the noise after long time average. (3) Under high fields, a multipass or optical cavity arrangement [80, 81], or a long hollow fiber [82, 83, 84, 85], could be applied to not only reduce the sample volume down to µL or even nL, but also overcome the space limitation in a superconducting magnet. For example, if we implement a 10-meter-long single mode hollow fiber of inner diameter 5µm, the sample volume is only of the order of V = πR2 l = 0.2µL, while its sensitivity could be enhanced with 10-meter-long optical path, which is estimated to be S/N∼1000 for 1 H, achieved by coiling this fiber inside a 10 Tesla magnet and detecting with 1 Watt of laser at 400 nm wavelength for 1 second. Besides, small sample volume usage in NMR is quite favorable, since sometimes it needs to use some expensive, highly toxic chemicals or mass- and volume-limited samples [86, 87]. In our experiment, we implement the hollow fiber scheme to measure the NSOR signal in a 2.7 T superconducting magnet. We tried to use several types of hollow fiber, e.g. photonic crystal fibers, Teflon AF tubings, fused silica capillary tubings, to realize long-length optical waveguide with high transmission. However, as far, we find that the light suffers from depolarization and bending-induced linear birefringence in liquid-core fibers, both of which attenuate the optical rotation signal significantly. In addition, due to the possible bandwidth limitation of instruments and fibers, we have 91 not achieved the measurement of high-frequency optical rotation, including Faraday rotation and NSOR, although the low-frequency measurement of Faraday rotation is successful after using chiral liquids to suppress bending-induced birefringence. 5.1 Experiment setup at high fields A high magnetic field that is larger than 1 Tesla is usually achieved by a cylindrical superconducting magnet, in which the magnetic field is along the bore axis and the bore area with homogenous field is quite narrow, typically having a diameter of 5∼20 cm. However, in the detection of NSOR, the direction of light propagation should be perpendicular to the magnetic field direction, i.e. the light direction is perpendicular to the axis of the magnet bore. Since the signal of NSOR is quite small, we need to make the light propagating for long distance in the radial direction of the magnet bore. There are two schemes for elongating optical path in the magnet, a optical cavity and hollow fiber. A optical cavity, based on multipass or resonant optical cavity, could guide light for long distance through many times of reflection in a narrow space, but also bring in some optical loss when the light is reflected on the interface of mirrors and liquids. In the case of the hollow fiber, as long as the refractive index of the wall of fibers is higher than the liquid, the light could be guided inside the hollow core of the fiber through total internal reflection. In common fused silica capillary tubings, the index of the tubing wall is 1.4696 (for 405 nm light), so it allows liquids that have a higher index (>1.46) to propagate for long distance. If the fiber is made of Teflon AF or it is a photonic crystal fiber, the effective refractive index could be smaller than 1.31, while most transparent liquids, including water, have a refractive index > 1.33, then this hollow fiber could be filled with most liquids to guide light. As far, benefiting from recent material technologies, hollow fibers based on Teflon AF material and photonic 92 crystal fiber are applied widely in precision spectroscopy and trace analysis of liquids [82, 83, 84, 85]. Here, we adopt the hollow fiber scheme for the detection of NSOR in a high magnetic field, because the hollow fiber could provide a long optical path with several meters and a flexible fiber could be coiled densely in a narrow space. 5.1.1 Experimental setup The hollow fiber scheme is illustrated in Figure 5.1. The magnetic field B0 is uniformly distributed vertically in the space. The hollow fiber filled with liquids are coiled circularly, as the light is guided through the fiber for a long optical path, then the outgoing light at the end is collimated by a lens to be analyzed by a polarimetry. A double-circle RF coil (or toroid coil) creates a centrifugal RF field B1 on the equatorial plane, so the RF field is always perpendicular to the optical fiber and the magnetic field B0 along the coiled fiber everywhere. In the presence of B0 , the nuclear spins are initially polarized along the magnetic field. After applying a short π/2 pulse, the spins are excited to rotate to the equatorial plane, and then precessing at the Larmor frequency according to the magnetic field B0 . The spin precession experiences a relaxation process, i.e. free induction decay in pulsed NMR, until all the spins relax to the thermal equilibrium condition after some time. During this process, the nuclear spin precession induces optical rotation (NSOR) at the same frequency, and the optical rotation of the outgoing light beam could be measured by the polarimetry. Such a single measurement cycle is not enough for NSOR detection, because the spin precession time is limited by actual coherence time T∗2 , which is much shorter than T1 (∼several seconds for 1 H), typically less than 100 ms due to decoherence arising from the inhomogeneity of magnetic fields. So we need to repeat this process, applying π/2 pulses periodically (at a time interval > 2·T1 ), and accumulate the optical rotation signal for many times. In addition, some decoupling pulses, e.g. CPMG pulse, is used to elongate the actual coherence time T∗2 , then the spin precession 93 could induce the optical rotation for several seconds. In this scheme, we combine the regular pulsed NMR technique and polarimetry analysis for the detection of NSOR. B0 B1 M B 0 =2.7T RF coil B1 B1 405nm Laser PD1 Lens Lens Connector 1 Connector 2 PBS PD2 Figure 5.1: Design of liquid core hollow fibers and RF coil for the detection of NSOR under high magnetic fields (the figure is not to scale). The magnetic field B0 is 2.7 T, corresponding to 115 MHz in 1 H NMR. Pulsed NMR technique is implemented to measure NSOR signal. We adopt a 400 MHz (1 H) NMR superconducting magnet (Oxford instruments), but the magnetic field B0 is downgraded to 2.7 Tesla, corresponding to the frequency of 115 MHz in 1 H NMR. Although a higher magnetic field gives a higher spin polarization, the bandwidth of optical detectors (photodiode amplifier) is limited and the noise level will be much larger than shot-noise level at high frequency, while the magnetic field only increase the nuclear spin polarization linearly. We managed to make a high bandwidth photodiode amplifier with near thermal-noise and shot-noise level, as the bandwidth goes up to 140MHz. Therefore, we balance the magnitude of the magnetic field and the bandwidth & noise level of the optical detector, to 94 approach a maximal signal-to-noise ratio in measurements practically. In addition, unlike 5mm sample tubes used in the regular NMR spectroscopy, the diameter of the densely coiled fiber bundle is as large as 1.0-1.5 inch typically, then the magnetic field homogeneity is rather poor, which gives an actual T∗2 less than 1ms. Therefore, the shim coils of the superconducting magnet are optimized to give a homogenous magnetic field in a ring area with 1.0-1.5 inch diameter. As a best result, we could achieve T∗2 ∼5ms for the 1 H in water, while it is about 0.1 s in the same magnet for a 5 mm NMR sample tube. The double-circle RF coil is connected with two trimmer capacitors C1 and C2 , as shown in Figure 5.2, in order to match the impedance of the RF amplifier. The ’Parallel-Series’ configuration of C1 and C2 is tuned to ensure the circuit is resonant at the Larmor frequency. In addition, the equivalent impedance of the circuits is tuned to be 50Ω, which matches the impedance of RF amplifier and cables, maximizing the RF power on the coil. When C2 C1 , we can get the resonance frequency ω0 and impedance Z0 of the circuit, r C1 + C2 L0 C1 C2 , LC1 Z0 = R(C1 + C2 )2 ω0 = (5.2) where L0 is the inductance of the coil. For a 1-inch-diameter double-circle coil as shown in Figure 5.2, we tuned the trimmer C1 (NMA-HV series from Voltronics Corporation) around 4pF and C2 around 320 pF, achieving a 115 MHz resonant circuit with minor RF reflection, which means a good impedance matching, by measuring the reflected RF power by a directional coupler and wattmeter (from Bird Electronics Corporation). The above double-circle coil could create a rather uniform RF pulse across the fiber bundle, but it could not be used to regular Faraday rotation due to the fact that the magnetic field is perpendicular to the light propagating direction, while we need to 95 RF 400 Transmission line C2 NMR 2.7T C1 L, R NMR RF Coil and Tank Circuit B0 Superconducting Magnet Figure 5.2: The NMR RF coil and tank circuit inside a 2.7 Tesla superconducting magnet. (left) Diagram of the RF circuit configuration inside the magnet. (right) Picture of the coil and tank circuit in this experiment. The coiled fiber around a (white) Teflon rod is placed between the two circles of the coil. The magnetic field induce by RF pulse is centrifugal and perpendicular to the B0 . The aluminum container is used for RF shielding. measure the high frequency Faraday rotation for signal bandwidth testing and other experimental apparatus inspections. Therefore, we implement a toroid coil, as shown in Figure 5.3, to enable the Faraday rotation measurements. In this configuration, the magnetic field is circularly distributed and roughly parallel to the light propagating direction in the fiber. The toroid coil has a higher inductance and the field homogeneity is a bit worse than the double-circle coil. We only use 12 turns of toroid, because more turns of coil result with a higher inductance, while a higher inductance should be used with smaller capacitances of C1 and C2 for impedance matching and capacitors are hardly manufactured or tuned less than 0.5 pF in practice. For this coil, we use C1 =5.0 pF and C2 =100 pF to get resonance condition (115 MHz) and impedance matching. 96 Teflon body Coil (a) A toroid coil. Coil (b) Cross section of the fiber-coil geometry Figure 5.3: Toroid coil for NSOR and Faraday rotation measurement. (a) Picture of the toroid coil (12 turns). A 10-meter-long hollow fiber is densely coiled in the groove layer in a Teflon body (OD=1.5 inch), (b) Cross section of the left picture. The hollow fiber is indicated in small circles (black) filled with liquids (green). The hollow fibers used in this experiment consists of fused silica or Teflon AF, and most of them have an outer diameter (OD) of 180µm, 250µm or 360µm. For all of these fiber, a liquid-optical interface is manufactured for guiding light and liquid through the hole of hollow fibers, while most material used in this system have a high degree of chemical resistance. Shown here in Figure 5.4 is schematic drawing of a enclosed connector combining a fiber connector and liquid port for this purpose, while both ends of the fiber are linked to such a connector. The main body of the connector and most threaded adapters are made of Polyether ether ketone (PEEK), which is chemically resistant to most organic liquids, including all chemicals for investigation in this thesis. A 0.75 mm hole is drilled along the axis of the connector body thoroughly, then the fiber is inserted into the connector body until it reach a window (made of MgF2 or Fused silica) at the right end, while it is also clamped and sealed at the left end of the connector by PEEK adapters, sleeves and micro tubing fittings (from LabSmith and IDEX Health&Science). A glass capillary tubing, whose outer diameter (OD) is a little smaller than 0.75 mm and the inner diameter is a little larger than the outer diameter of the fiber, is used to keep the fiber straight inside the 97 connector. With aid of a threaded liquid port on the top of the connector, the liquids is introduced into the connector body and then the hollow fiber through a PEEK tubing with ID=150µm and OD=360µm. For a long hollow fiber, the liquid friction is rather high, we use a high pressure syringe to push the liquid into the PEEK tubings and hollow fibers. Sometimes we even use a high-pressure (50∼300 psi) Helium gas cylinder to apply the force consistently, then some gas bubbles remained in corners of the connector are minimized under high pressure and will not affect light guiding at the interface of the hollow fiber and the window. Also a inline PEEK microfilter with 1µm frit is interconnected with the PEEK tubing, thus filtering out small dusts and other unsolvable particles before the liquid entering the fiber connector. The liquid flow is shown in blue in Figure 5.4, and the liquid inside the system could be purged out by blowing high-pressure inert gas from the PEEK tubing before filling the hollow fiber with other kinds of liquids. Figure 5.5 shows the picture of this liquid-light interface, where the OD diameter of the connector body is 0.5 inch. The incident laser is collimated into the hollow fiber by using a fused silica lens with anti-reflection coating, according to the Gaussian beam waist formula, D1 = 4λf /(3πD0 ), where, D0 (mm) the input beam diameter , f (mm) the focal length of the lens, λ (µm) the wavelength and D1 (mm) the output beam diameter at the focal plane. As shown in Figure 5.6, the beginning of the fiber is placed at the focal plane of the lens, then the collimated light beam is quasi-parallelly injected into the fiber core that is filled with liquid, while the window in the fiber connector isolates the liquid from air. Despite the above collimation issue of laser beam, the more important light polarization issue should also be considered. As the theory of mode matching and polarization birefringence is described in Section 5.2, we need to appropriately choose the collimating lens and the size of the fiber core, then the light beam could be well matched with the fiber core, which means the size of fundamental mode of light beam is almost equal to the fundamental mode of the hollow fiber as 98 Figure 5.4: Schematic drawing of the fiber connector and liquid port. The hollow fiber is a flexible capillary tubing or a photonic crystal fiber. All the adapters, ports and connector body are made of commercial polyether ether ketone (PEEK), as well as the liquid filling tubing. At the right end of the connector, a window (MgF2 or Fused silica) is placed between the fiber end and a PEEK cap, as a Teflon O-ring creates a seal at the interface. A glass capillary tubing, whose inner diameter is a little larger than the outer diameter of the fiber, is used to keep the fiber straight inside the connector, while it is almost as long as the hole inside the connector and its right end is near the window. The filled liquid is shown in blue. a waveguide when the incident angle of light beam is as small as possible. Only at mode match condition, the linear polarization of light beam is maintained optimally, since the fundamental mode of light beam keep polarization to maximal extent when propagating inside a fiber as a waveguide, while higher-order modes hardly keep their polarization inside bent fiber, which is similar to the depolarization phenomenon in regular multimode fibers. For example, for a laser beam of diameter 1 mm and the fiber core with 50µm, the lens should have a focal length 5 cm for mode matching. In addition, we also find that the bending-induced birefringence (BIB) occurs in the liquid core hollow fiber in a coiled geometry, and this effect deteriorates the linear polarization of light beams, which leads to a small fraction of linear polarization for analysis in polarimetry. To suppress this effect, we manage to use chiral liquids to 99 Figure 5.5: Picture of the fiber connector and adapter. The diameter of the connector body is 0.5 inch. The hollow fiber is a flexible fused silica capillary tubing (Polymicro) coated with polyimide, OD∼360µm, ID∼50-150µm. reduce the bending-induced birefringence, because the chiral liquids inherently rotates the polarization plane through circular birefringence but still maintain the linearity of polarization, and chiral liquids has a much higher rotation capability than BIB, which helps suppress the depolarization and circular polarization effects induced by BIB. The theory of mode matching and bending-induced birefringence is briefly described in Section 5.2. Once the light beam emerges from the other window at the end of the fiber, the light beam is in divergent profile, so another lens is used to collimate the divergent beam, making the light beam as a collimated outgoing beam for the subsequent polarization analysis by means of a polarimetry. 5.1.2 Three types of hollow fibers In 1970s, when the research of solid glass core fiber was just launched for optical communication [88, 89, 90], the liquid core hollow fiber was also investigated for the same application, since it has the least degree of imperfection as the liquid core is homogeneous and free of mechanical stress [91, 92, 93]. Although, due to the thermal and mechanical instability, the liquid core hollow fiber can not make a success of commercial optical communication, while the solid glass core fiber could be well 100 Window Collimating lens Liquid Fiber connector body Fiber cladding Laser beam D0 core diameter (ID) Beam diameter f Focal length Liquid core D1 Collimated beam diameter Figure 5.6: Collimating the laser beam into the liquid core of the hollow fiber. The collimated beam diameter D1 at the left interface of the fiber is equal to D1 = 4λf /(3πD0 ), which should be smaller than the fiber core diameter (ID). The zigzag total-internal-reflection pattern illustrates the light propagation path, although in small core fiber, the fiber performs as a waveguide for the light beam. The laser beam has a beam diameter 1 mm typically. The fiber core diameter (ID) ranges from 50µm to 150µm. The focal length is about 1cm∼10cm, which is chosen for both of spot size matching and mode matching, depending on the laser beam diameter and fiber core diameter. The liquid is shown in blue. The core index n1 is larger than the cladding index n2 . manufactured with ultralow imperfection and high stability, the liquid core hollow fiber still play an important role in some scientific areas, i.e. chemical analysis, spectroscopy and sensors [94, 95, 82, 83], since the hollow fiber could elongate optical path for some liquid chemicals instead of optical cavity. As far as now, there are three types of liquid core hollow fibers in use, fused silica capillary tubings, Teflon AF tubings and photonic-crystal fibers, as introduced in the following. In the early years, only fused silica capillary tubings are available for making liquid core hollow fiber [93]. When using fused silica capillary tubing, the liquid for filling should have a higher refractive index than the fused silica (n∼1.46), therefore only some chemical liquids, e.g. aromatic and halocarbon compounds, could meet this requirement, while most other common chemicals and water-based solutions have a lower index than fused silica. This issue severely limits the utility of fused silica capillary tubings in chemistry. 101 One way to extend the usability of fused silica capillary tubing is coat the inner wall of the capillary tubing with some low-refractive-index material. Teflon AF 2400, a clear amorphous perfluoropolymer having a refractive index of 1.29, is a good choice for this type of coating [96, 97], because its ultralow refractive index is even lower than water (n=1.33). Nowadays, the commercial Teflon AF tubing is also available, fully consisting of pure Teflon AF 2400, although its wall is thicker than fused silica tubing. The Teflon AF could be used as liquid core hollow fiber, allowing filling most of the chemical liquids of a refractive index exceeding 1.29, so it becomes a practical tool for Raman, fluorescence and absorption spectroscopy for liquid and water solution samples [98, 83]. We also try to use the Teflon AF tubing (purchased from Biogeneral Inc.) as liquid core hollow fiber, but find that the light scattering on the inner wall surface is considerable, probably due to the poor surface quality of Teflon tubing in manufacturing as far, so the optical loss is serious when the length of tubing exceeds 2 m for the liquid sample water and Toluene, . Since a long optical path about 10m is required to measure NSOR signal at high magnetic field, the Teflon tubing with current manufacturing technology is not usable for our experiment. Another candidate for the liquid core hollow fiber is the Photonic-crystal fiber (PCF), which is a type of microstructured optical fibers consisting of a periodic array of microscopic air holes along the entire fiber length [99, 100, 101]. With an ability to confine light in hollow cores that is not possible in conventional optical fiber, PCF have many applications in fiber-optic communications, fiber lasers, highly sensitive gas sensors, and other scientific areas. As shown in Figure 5.7(a), a typical photonic crystal fiber has a bundle of small cladding holes and relatively large central hole, allowing specific spectrum of light propagating through the central hole without scattering outside from cladding holes, because PCF could confine light by band gap effects instead of total-internal-reflection effects in conventional optical fibers. Benefiting from this special structure, a new type of liquid core hollow fiber is available, 102 if the central hole is filled with liquids while the cladding holes are not [84, 85], the average index of air-silica cladding hole is sufficiently low (as low as air), and thereby the filling of liquid into the core turns the photonic bandgap guidance into total internal reflection guidance. The tricky part here is to achieve selective filling of liquids in different types of holes in PCF. People have developed several efficient methods to seal the ends of cladding holes but still leave the central hole open, such as fusing the cladding holes at the fiber ending with a conventional fiber fusion splicer [102], gluing the cladding hole at ends with UV curable glue by utilizing the dependence of filling speed on the size of the air holes [103, 104], closing the cladding holes when manufacturing PCF [102], and micromachining the cladding holes by using high power femtosecond IR laser [105]. For the capability in our lab, we use a fusion splicer and a Bunsen burner to quickly close the cladding holes, as well as use UV curable glue to seal the cladding holes. As shown in Figure 5.7(c), we adopt the three-step method as described in Reference [103] to selectively seal the cladding holes of a PCF (HC-800-1, from NKT Photonics) with UV curable glue (NOA 71, from Norland Products). We succeed to fill water in this selectively sealed PCF and guide 405 nm laser in a 1meter-long PCF with optical transmission efficiency of 10%. However, since the core (9.5µm) of this PCF is relatively small and it is hard to align the fiber to be straight at the beginning, the output light beam is almost completely depolarized arising from mode conversion during propagation. Furthermore, the PCF fiber is very fragile, expensive, and the small central hole suffers the jam issue because of small dusts from connector or liquids, which cause some difficulties in practical operations of a long PCF exceeding 1 m, therefore we have not managed to use PCF fiber as a practical tool to measure NSOR in this experiment as far, although liquid selectively-filled PCF could guide light for almost all transparent liquids even with ultralow refractive index. 103 (a) (b) (c) Figure 5.7: Photonic crystal fiber (PCF). (a) SEM imaging of the PCF. (Model: HC-800-1. Purchased from NKT Photonics. Picture is adapted from Thorlabs) (b) Optical microscopy imaging of the original PCF. Some light is guided into the fiber from the other end for illumination. There are two type of holes, the central hole (OD=9.5µm), and many cladding holes aside (OD=2.3µm). (c) The cladding hole is sealed with UV cure epoxy (from Norland Products), while the central hole is still open, only allowing liquids flowing through the central hole. Figure 5.8: Flexible capillary tubings made of fused silica (TSH series, from Polymicro Technologies). (left). ID=40µm, OD=180µm; (right). ID=250µm, OD=365µm. All the tubings are coated with thin-walled polyimide. For practical considerations, most hollow fibers used in this experiment is fused silica capillary tubings, due to its low-cost usage, various choices of inner and outer diameters and its flexibility as well as sturdiness. As shown in Figure 5.8, the flexible fused silica capillary tubings used in our experiment mostly come from Polymicro Technologies (TSH series), which provides high quality capillary tubings at low cost. We make various choices of inner diameter (ID) and outer diameters (OD) of tubings, 104 and find that the capillary tubings of OD=360µm and ID=50µm∼150µm have a best performance of filling liquids and guiding light, as these thick but flexible tubings could be aligned very straightly at the beginning for accepting incoming collimated laser beams, thereby reducing mode conversion when the light is introduced into the liquid core hollow fiber. Of course, the usage of capillary tubings limits the choice of liquids, as the refractive index of liquids should exceed fused silica, therefore we only use several high index liquids, e.g. Toluene, Xylene and Limonene, for the investigation of light guiding and polarization in liquid core hollow fibers. 5.1.3 Pulse sequence Due to random fluctuations of the local magnetic field, the transverse relaxation time T2 (i.e. dephasing time) of 1 H nuclei is about 1∼10 s in liquid samples at room temperature. However, if the magnetic field is inhomogeneous across the sample volume, especially when the size of sample is relatively large, the actual transverse relaxation time T∗2 is reduced much more. The relaxation process of nuclear spin magnetization is according to ∗ M = M0 · e−t/T2 , (5.3) and the linewidth of signal peak at frequency domain broadens as ∆f 1 =1/(π·T2 ) , 2 where the linewidth ∆f 1 is the full width at half height of a peak in the spectrum. 2 In the superconducting magnet used in this experiment, the magnet core is designed for standard 5 mm NMR sample tubes, so the magnetic field is rather inhomogenous as the outer diameter of coiled fiber ring is 1.5 inch, although we have optimized the shim coils for maximal field homogeneity. The free induction decay (FID) signal of 1 H in liquid Toluene after applying a simple π/2 (90◦ ) pulse is shown in the range of 0 ms < t < 3 ms in Figure 5.11, 105 and its spectrum is shown in Figure 5.9, which is measured by a homemade NMR spectrometer (For details, see Thesis [106]). Because there are two types of hydrogen in Benzyl and CH3 groups, two peaks are shown in the spectrum. The linewidth ∆f 1 could be estimated from the full width at half height of a peak, which is about 2 300 Hz as shown in Figure 5.9, so the actual dephasing time T∗2 ∼1ms, which is much shorter than T2 of sample in a small 5mm tube. Since the longitude relaxation time T1 , originating from recovery of the longitude component of the nuclear spin magnetization through thermal equilibrium relaxation, is usually several seconds for 1 H at room temperature, then in a simple π/2 pulse scheme, the effective time for measurement is dominated by T∗2 , which is as low as 1 ms, leading to a low signal-tonoise ratio (SNR) in measurement. Therefore, some decoupling pulse sequence should be applied to elongate the coherence time. NMR Amplitude [mV/Hz] 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 -1000 -1500 -2000 -2500 Detuning [Hz] -3000 -3500 -4000 Figure 5.9: The conventional NMR spectrum of Toluene, measured with a OD=1.5 inch toroid coil (see Figure 5.3). The x-axis is the relative frequency shift from 115.325049 MHz. There is a chemical shift (∼5ppm) between Benzyl (left peak) and CH3 (right peak) groups. The full width at half height ∆f 1 is estimated as 300Hz, 2 which is equivalent to the actual dephasing time T∗2 =1 ms. In order to improve SNR, we implement Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) pulse sequence [107, 108] to sustain the nuclear-spin coherence for longer periods of time. As illustrated in Figure 5.10, in CPMG pulse sequence, a initial π/2 pulse 106 creates transverse magnetization, then after time τ /2 when the induction signal is decayed sufficiently, the spin ensemble is out of phase due to the magnetic field inhomogeneity, a subsequent inversion pulse (πy ) reverses the spin direction, which also inverses the phase difference, thereby resulting in a complete refocusing of spin magnetization after some time of evolution when the spin ensemble have the same phase again; subsequent inversion pulses are repeatedly applied at time interval τ , in order to refocus the spin ensemble for long time. Figure 5.11 shows the induction signal of 1 H in Toluene when applying the first three inversion pulses in CPMG sequence, where the spin magnetization could be refocused perfectly at time interval of 6 ms. Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) sequence Figure 5.10: CPMG pulse sequence. π/2x is the 90◦ pulse applied on the x-axis on the transverse x − y plane, and πy (inversion pulse) is the 180◦ pulse applied on the y-axis on the same plane. The time interval between π/2x and the first πy pulse is τ /2, while the subsequent πy pulses are separated by τ . Inversion pulses in CPMG sequence could be applied for many times, then the nuclear-spin coherence could be sustained for long time. Therefore, the effective time in each cycle (T1 ) is elongated for larger SNR. As shown in Figure 5.12, inversion pulses are repeated by 800 times in 5 s, the NMR induction signal decays slowly. The envelop profile of the whole curve signify the ideal relaxation time after removing environmental decoherence by periodic inversion pulses, and it shows that the decoherence time T2 is about 2 s, which is much larger than the actual T∗2 (∼1 ms) under inhomogenous magnetic fields. 107 0.20 0.15 0.10 Signal (V) 0.05 0.00 -0.05 -0.10 -0.15 -0.20 -0.25V 0 5 10 Time (ms) 15 20ms Figure 5.11: The NMR induction signal after applying a CPMG pulse. A πx /2 pulse creates transverse magnetization, then the signal decays quickly in 3ms due to inhomogeneous dephasing, in which some spin precess a bit faster while some other spins are slow. The first 180◦ inversion pulse (πy ) applied at t=3ms flip the spin direction, then the fast and slow spin are reversed, resulting in a complete refocusing at time 6ms when all the spins have the same phase. Subsequently, periodic πy pulses are applied at interval τ =6ms, thereby creating a periodic refocusing for up to several seconds. Here, the pulse width is 9µs and 18µs of the π/2 and π pulse respectively. 5.1.4 High bandwidth photodiode amplifier The resonant frequency for 1 H nuclei is 115 MHz at 2.7 Tesla, and the optical rotation frequency of NSOR is also equal to this value. In order to measure such a high-frequency optical signal, the photodiode amplifier for detection should have a high bandwidth larger than 115 MHz, as well as low noise level. At high frequency, electronic circuits always have unavoidable parasitic capacitance, which exists between the parts of electronic components and wires because of their proximity to each other. The parasitic capacitance, as well as the inherent terminal capacitance in the photodiode, dominates the response of circuits at high frequency, sets the circuit bandwidth and induces unexpected noise gain, while at low frequency these capacitance are negligible. 108 Figure 5.12: The long-time performance of CPMG pulse sequence. After applying inversion pulses (πy ) after 800 repetitions in 5 s, the NMR induction signal decays slowly. The envelop profile of of the whole curve signify the ideal relaxation time after removing environmental decoherence by periodic inversion pulses, and it shows that the decoherence time T2 is about 2s, which is much larger than the actual T∗2 (∼1ms) under inhomogenous magnetic field. Some sharp peaks that are significantly larger than relaxation signal are the RF bursts when applying high-voltage RF pulses. As shown in Figure 5.13, the photodiode amplifier circuit at high frequency is the same as at low frequency, as shown in Section 3.1.5. However, the terminal capacitance Ci in the photodiode should be considered, as the photodiode could be modeled as a current source ip bypassed with its terminal capacitance Ci . The feedback capacitance Cf compensates phase in circuit by counteracting with Ci , as well as control noise level and bandwidth. At high frequency, the parasitic capacitance, e.g. induced by leads of operational amplifier chip and pads on circuits, usually provides this feedback capacitance, as this parasitic Cf is around 0.2 pF∼0.5 pF depending on the manufacturing of the circuit. Apart from Ci and Cf , the input capacitance of operational amplifier (op amp), such as common mode input capacitance Ccm and differential mode input capacitance Cdm , also affect the behavior of circuit. The 109 Figure 5.13: The model of photodiode and the circuit for photodiode amplifier. The photodiode is modeled as a current source ip bypassed with its terminal capacitance Ci . bandwidth of photodiode amplifier circuit at high frequency is generally determined as [109] s f−3dB = fGBW , 2πRf (Cf + Ci + Cin ) (5.4) where the bandwidth f here is defined as -3dB bandwidth, f is the gain -3dB GBW bandwidth product of op amp, Rf is the feedback resistance, and Cin is the input capacitance of circuits, including the input capacitance of op amp and other parasitic capacitance in circuits besides Cf . Apparently, a small feedback resistance Rf , small capacitance including Ci , Cin and parasitic capacitance Cf , and a high gain bandwidth product (GBW) of op amp is required to achieve a high-bandwidth circuit. We choose some high-bandwidth and small-input-capacitance electronic components to manufacture the photodiode amplifier circuit. The photodiode used in this circuits is a Si PIN photodiode (Model: S5973-02, Hamamatsu Photonics K.K.), which has a high-speed response 1 GHz, with a spectrum response range from ultraviolet to near infrared, especially optimized for violet light. The photodiode (S5973-2) has a terminal capacitance 2.5 pF, but could be suppressed below 0.5 pF after apply- 110 ing a 10 V reverse voltage on the photodiode. The op amp is ADA4817-1 (Analog Devices, Inc.) with a high gain bandwidth product (GBW) ∼ 410 MHz, and its common mode input capacitance Ccm =1.3 pF, differential mode input capacitance Cdm =0.1 pF, so the input capacitance Cin is approximated as 1.4 pF. In addition, in order to get a small parasitic capacitance, the whole circuit is designed based on small surface mount electronic components with compact configuration, as shown in Figure 5.14. When the circuit is configured with Rf =510Ω and without extra compensation capacitance, the measured noise level (no light input) is √ √ about 6 nV/ Hz, near the calculated thermal noise level 3 nV/ Hz from the feed√ p back resistor Rf (n = πkB Rf T). The shot noise level is 1.6 nV/ Hz, assuming 0.1 mW laser power is received by one photodiode. The bandwidth f-3dB is about 140 MHz, a bit smaller than the theoretical estimation 233 MHz (see Equation 5.4), providing Cf + Ci + Cin ∼2.4 pF, partly due to the bandwidth limitation arising from measurement instruments. In summary, the bandwidth and noise level of this photodiode amplifier circuit is capable of measuring high-frequency optical rotation signals at 115 MHz. Figure 5.14: Picture of the high bandwidth photodiode amplifier. (a) The compact photodiode amplifier of one channel. Photodiode (Model: S5973-02, Hamamatsu Photonics K.K.) is placed at the center. The operational amplifier is ADA48171 (Analog Devices, Inc.). (b) Two channel photodiode amplifier with differential output. Circuits are enclosed in the blue aluminum box. 111 5.2 Polarization in liquid core hollow fibers Maintaining the polarization linearity of light beam is crucial for the detection of optical rotation, as the polarimetry is only capable of analyze rotation angle of the linear polarized part of light. If the light beam is partially depolarized or circularly polarized, the detection efficiency will be reduced, leading to a smaller SNR. In practice, almost all fibers, including single mode fibers, are birefringent, because of fiber imperfection, scattering, external stress, electromagnetic fields and bending [110, 111, 112, 113]. In a single-mode solid core fiber, the light still propagates in near degenerate modes, HEx11 and HEy11 , with orthogonal polarization; so when the fiber is bended or stressed, the fiber become locally anisotropic and causes a fast- and slow -axis with an index difference (birefringence) for the pair of degenerated modes, resulting in partial depolarization of light beam finally [114, 112]. In a multimode solid core fiber, apart from the anisotropy issue for the degenerated polarized modes for each mode, different modes have different guiding properties inside fiber, resulting in phase shifts between different modes, usually called modal dispersion, so light beams propagating multimode fibers are depolarized normally. Liquid core hollow fibers are actually step-index fibers. As far as we have tested, the liquid core fibers filled with Toluene and Limonene are running in multi-modes. Although the bending does not induce anisotropy of the liquid core, the cladding still suffers from bending-induced birefringence, which performs like a linear retarder, attenuates the polarization linearity of light, and reduces the SNR in experiments of optical rotation. Besides, the mode conversion and fiber twist also leads to birefringence and depolarization. We try to understand these issues and implemented some methods, like optimal mode matching and linear-birefringence suppression via chiral liquids, in order to maintain the polarization linearity of light in the multimode liquid core hollow fibers. 112 In this section, the theory of light guiding inside a multimode fiber will be reviewed first. Then the issue of mode matching when the light beam is launching into the fiber core, the bending-induced birefringence in liquid core fiber, and some issues about bandwidth of fiber will be described sequentially. 5.2.1 Multimode liquid core fiber When the high-index liquid is filled in a fused silica capillary tubing, this liquid core fiber could be considered as a step-index fiber, n(r) = n1 0 < r < a core, (5.5) = n2 r > a cladding, as illustrated in Figure 5.15, where a is the core radius. Since the refractive index in liquid core is close to the cladding normally, n1 ≈ n2 (n2 =1.46958 for fused silica), it allows using weakly guiding approximation [115, 116], under which the modes are assumed to be nearly transverse and can have an arbitrary state of polarization consisting of two independent sets of modes in x- or y−polarization. In the following, the analysis of step-index fiber follows the work originally by Gloge [115], as well as other works [117, 116, 118] and some special conditions for the light guiding in the liquid core hollow fiber in our experiments. In the weakly guiding approximation, the transverse component of the electric field (Ex or Ey ) satisfies ∇2 Ψ = 0 µ0 n2 ∂ 2Ψ . ∂t2 (5.6) For an ideally circular and straight fiber, n only depends on the radial coordinate r, we can assume the wavefunction with the form Ψ(r, φ, z, t) = R(r)Φ(φ)ei(ωt−βz) 113 (5.7) a Incident Waves Core z Cladding Air z=0 Figure 5.15: The model of liquid core hollow fiber. The liquid core has index n1 , while cladding has index n2 . When (n1 − n2 )/n1 is small, the fiber could be modeled as a weakly guiding fiber. where β is the propagation constant and ω is the angular frequency of light, which leads to a equation in cylindrical coordinates r and φ, r2 R d2 R 1 dR + dr2 r dr 1 d2 Φ + r2 n2 (r)k02 − β 2 = − = +l2 2 Φ dφ (5.8) where k0 = ω/c = 2π/λ is the wave number in free space. Therefore, Φ should in the form of cos(lφ) or sin(lφ), and Φ(φ) is periodic due to the circular symmetry of fiber, i.e. Φ(φ + 2π) = Φ(φ), the number l should be quantized as l = 0, 1, 2, ..., (5.9) where for each discrete l, there even allows several guided modes, which is known as the guided modes of the system, designated as (Linear Polarized) LPlm modes (m=1,2,3,...). For simplicity, it is convenient to define the normalized frequency V , the normalized propagation constant b and numerical aperture NA q q 2π 2 2 V = k0 a n1 − n2 = a n21 − n22 , λ 114 (5.10) b= β 2 /k02 − n22 n2e − n22 = , n21 − n22 n21 − n22 NA = (5.11) q n21 − n22 (5.12) where, ne = β/k0 (k0 = 2π/λ) is called effective index. Only for k02 n22 < β 2 < k02 n21 (i.e. 0 < b < 1), the fields R(r) are oscillatory in the core and decay in the cladding[119, 116], which are called guided modes in a fiber. From Equation 5.8, the radial part of the equation follows as a standard Bessel equation, r 2 d2 R 1 dR r2 2 2 + + V (1 − b) 2 − l R = 0; dr2 r dr a 2 2 d R 1 dR 2 2 2 r + r − V b 2 + l R = 0; dr2 r dr a 0<r<a (5.13) r>a Therefore, the solutions are given by [119, 116] √ 1 − b · ar ) √ for 0 < r < a, Rco (r) = A Jl (V 1 − b) √ Kl (V b · ar ) √ for r > a. Rcl (r) = A Kl (V b) Jl (V (5.14) Which has already incorporated the boundary condition ψco (a− ) = ψcl (a+ ) = A (A is a constant). Furthermore, considering the other boundary condition, 0 ψco (r) |a− = ψcl0 (r) |a+ , we can obtain √ √ √ Kl+1 (V b) √ Jl+1 (V 1 − b) √ √ Fl (b) = V 1 − b −V b = 0, Jl (V 1 − b) Kl (V b) (5.15) where Jn (x) and Kn (x) are the Bessel J-type function and modified Bessel K-type function respectively[120]. This equation is called the characteristic equation for the weakly guiding step-in fiber, and it limits the choice of b for given fiber parameter V 115 and discrete number l. Usually, there are several roots (b1 , ..., bm ) of Equation 5.15, which are designated as blm , corresponding to the guiding mode LPlm . For example, when V = 10, l=0, there are three choices for b, as shown in Figure 5.16, thus, there are three guiding modes LP01 , LP02 , LP03 . 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 0.2 0.4 b 0.6 0.8 1 Figure 5.16: The graph of |Fl (b)| (see Equation 5.15) at V = 10 and l=0 . There are three roots of b in the range of [0, 1], b01 , b02 , b03 , i.e. m = 1, 2, 3. These roots of b corresponds to guiding modes LP01 , LP02 , LP03 . The largest b is taken as the first solution and set m to 1. From the definition in Equation 5.10, the normalized waveguide number V is parameter of the fiber, which is determined by the wavelength λ, core diameter a, core index n1 and cladding index n2 . When V is changed in terms of these parameters for different fibers, the value of blm also varies for a fixed mode LPlm , which could only be numerically calculated from Equation 5.15. . Figure 5.17 shows the b − V characteristics for each guiding mode LPlm . Only when there is a root b between [0,1], it allows a guiding mode LPlm . From these numerical results, there is cutoff V value for each mode, e.g. when V < 2.4, it only allows one mode LP01 ; when V < 116 3.83, it then allows two modes LP01 and LP11 . The cutoff frequency Vl is determined when b → 0 in Equation 5.15, which is equivalent to the condition [116] J1 (V ) = 0 for l = 0, (5.16) Jl−1 (V ) = 0 for l ≥ 1 (Vc 6= 0). Therefore, the cutoff frequency V is 2.4048 for LP11 , 3.8317 for LP21 , and so on. When V < 2.4048, it is called single-mode condition, under which only one mode LP01 , called fundamental mode, could be guided through the fiber core (Although the cutoff frequency of LP01 is 0, if V is too small, 0 < V < 1.5, the light power will reside more in the cladding region than the core region, then the fiber is vulnerable to external disturbance, bending and contamination, making it impossible to work in practice). The fundamental mode supports two degenerate and orthogonal polarization modes, while higher modes supports ≥4 degenerate polarization modes. 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 Figure 5.17: b − V characteristics of weakly guiding fibers. The b value is the root of Equation 5.15, and it depends on parameter V for each mode. Only when there is a root b between [0,1], it allows a guiding mode LPlm . There is cutoff V value for each mode. 117 Bringing in the angular function Φ(φ) in Equation 5.8, based on ψ(r, φ)=R(r)Φ(φ), we can obtain the transverse distribution of an x−polarized electrical field component in a LPlm mode, √ Jl (V 1 − blm · ar ) √ ψco (r, φ) = A cos(lφ) for 0 < r < a, Jl (V 1 − blm ) √ Kl (V blm · ar ) √ ψcl (r, φ) = A cos(lφ) for r > a, Kl (V blm ) (5.17) where blm is the normalized propagation constant for its corresponding mode and A is a positive constant, while for y−polarized component, the angular function becomes sin(lφ). From these expressions, as to the mode designation for linear polarization mode LPlm , the azimuthal mode number l relates to the angular variation of the transverse electric field. If l is zero for LP0m , the transverse electric field is independent of φ, which means it has circular symmetry. The radial mode number m corresponds to the mth root in Equation 5.15, resulting in m−nodes of axial distribution of LPlm . Some axial distribution of ψ(r, φ) is plotted in Figure 5.18. LP01 LP02 LP11 LP12 LP21 LP22 LP31 LP41 Figure 5.18: Calculated axial intensity distribution in the fiber core (r ≤ a) of LPlm modes guided by a step-index fiber with v=7.1. The colorful contour maps represent the intensity of the square of electrical field amplitude |e|2 ; Red: high intensity; Blue: low intensity. LP01 mode is very close to a Gaussian beam profile. A Gaussian beam launching into the fiber core axial-symmetrically only excites LP0m modes, which have circular symmetry as the incident Gaussian beam. 118 In traditional mode designations in the study of metallic waveguides in microwave technology, there are rotationally symmetric TE (transverse electric) and TM (transverse magnetic) modes, and φ-dependent fields as hybrid modes HE and EH. For a step-index fiber, only TE0m , TM0m , HElm and EHlm could be guided [115, 117]. The traditional designation is equivalent to LPlm , but the index is slight different, LPlm ↔HEl+1,m , EHl+1,m for l 6= 1, and LP1m ↔HE2,m , TE0m , TM0m . The fundamental mode LP01 is equivalent to HE11 . In each LPlm mode for l ≥ 1, it contains several modes, e.g. LP11 contains TE01 , TM01 and HE21 . Besides HE1m modes, other modes are not linearly polarized, although some combinations of them could form a linearly polarized mode. The fundamental mode HE11 , i.e. LP01 , plays an important role in high-bandwidth fiber communication, as well as the polarized light transportation in single-mode and multimode fibers. In the core region, the transverse electric and magnetic fields of HE11 mode are approximately linearly polarized, and there are two mutually orthogonal polarized degenerate mode with x− and y−polarization. In addition, the transverse field in HE11 mode resides more in the central area of the core, as shown as LP01 in Figure 5.18. Other higher modes HE1m have more energy distributed in the cladding, making it more vulnerable to external disturbance, bending. In addition, the mode conversion from HElm to higher modes could introduce phase shift and depolarization, as the propagation constant blm , and thereby the effective index ne (see Equation 5.22), is slightly different for each modes. In practice, it is favorable to use a single-mode fiber, or operating a multimode fiber as a single-mode one with some methods. If a Gaussian beam is collimated axial-symmetrically into a circular fiber, it only excites HE1m (m=1, 2, . . ., n) modes, i.e. circular-symmetry modes [119], thus we mainly consider the HE1m modes in the following. As to a capillary tubing with a core diameter 50 µm filled with Toluene, n1 =1.526 (Toluene) and n2 =1.4696 (Fused silica), for guiding 405 nm laser, the normalized 119 frequency V =159, allowing about 50 HE1m modes (if the light is not optimally coupled into fiber because of some displacement or angular asymmetry, it allows more than 10000 modes including all HElm and TE0m modes). The cutoff core diameter for single mode guiding of liquid Toluene core fibers is 0.76 µm, which is beyond the capability of current commercial hollow fiber manufacturing technology. In the case for Limonene (n = 1.484), the results are similar: in a 50µm core fiber, V =80, it allows 25 HE1m modes, and the single-mode cutoff diameter is 1.5 µm. For a capillary tubing with a smallest core diameter 2µm that we can get commercially (TSP002, Polymicro Technologies), it allows 2 modes, but it also suffers more from liquid imperfection, e.g. dust, thermal fluctuation and thermal lensing, which leads to complicate mode conversions inside fibers and thereby depolarization. 5.2.2 Mode matching When a light beam is coupled into the core of a multimode fiber, it could excite many modes of this fiber. Here, ‘excite’ means the transverse electrical field component of the light beam could be matched with or decomposed into the distribution of some modes in the fiber. When a Gaussian beam is coupled axial-symmetrically into a circular fiber, it only excites HE1m modes. Furthermore, if the diameter of the laser beam, focal length of the lens and core diameter is appropriately configured, only the fundamental mode HE11 could be significantly excited, which is called mode matching [121]. Under this condition, the launched fundamental mode will propagate through a long multimode (liquid or solid core) fiber, as long as the fiber is free from considerable bending, distortion and any other external stress, then the single mode operation in multimode fibers could be achieved perfectly, even for high-bandwidth optical communications with tens of gigahertz [92, 122]. Any deviations from this optimal coupling will give rise to mode conversions at the beginning of the fiber, resulting in a sharply decreasing polarization linearity [121]. 120 When a Gaussian beam is launched axial-symmetrically into the core of a circular fiber, it only excites HE1m modes, and the excitation efficiency is given [119, 121] by P1m 1 Z U K (W ) 2a m 0 m J0 (Um R) e−R2 /(w1 /a)2 RdR =2 V K1 (Wm ) w1 J0 (Um ) 0 2 Z+∞ K0 (Wm R) −R2 /(w1 /a)2 + e RdR K0 (Wm ) (5.18) 01 where w1 is the radius of collimated Gaussian beam at the surface of the fiber, a is the radius of fiber core , V is the normalized frequency of the fiber (See definition in Equation 5.10), and Jn (x) and Kn (x) are Bessel J-type and modified Bessel Ktype function. The parameter Um is numerically determined by J0 (U ) = 0, which is p 2 , both of which are actually the cutoff frequency of mode HE2m and Wm = V 2 − Um m-dependent constants. The parameter Um is listed in Table 5.1. When the liquid of Toluene is filled in the fiber core of diameter 2a = 50µm, V = 159. The calculated excitation efficiency in terms of w1 /a is plotted in Figure 5.19, where the excitation profiles for the first 6 modes are shown. For a fixed light wavelength λ and fiber core radius a, the radius w1 of Gaussian beam collimated on the fiber core could be controlled by the collimating lens and the Gaussian beam spot size, since w1 = 4λf 3πw0 (5.19) where f is the focal length and w0 is the radius of the Gaussian bean when it incidences on the collimating lens. From Figure 5.19, we can see that a maximal excitation efficiency of HE11 is about 95% around w1 /a=0.68. The mode matching profile is similar for Limonene core fiber (2a=50µm, V =80), i.e. the optimal mode matching condition is met around w1 /a∼0.68, as well as for other high V value [121]. From Equation 5.18, the relative ratio of mode excitation at mode m1 and m2 almost depends on the ratio of K0 (Wm1 )K1 (Wm2 )/(K1 (Wm1 )K0 (Wm2 )), but numerical calculations show 121 that K0 (Wm )/K1 (Wm ) is insensitive to V , but almost equal to 1 for the lowest modes m <10, which are the main excited modes in normal condition 0.2 < w1 /a < 1.2. Therefore, the mode matching condition w1 /a∼0.68 is robust for various liquid core fibers. Under the condition of mode matching, the optimal beam diameter (2w1 ) is 34µm for a liquid core fiber of diameter 50µm. For a typical beam diameter 1mm, to meet the mode matching condition, the best choice of lens is f ≈5 cm. Excitation efficiency [%] 100 80 60 40 20 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 Figure 5.19: Mode excitation efficiency versus w1 /a. w1 is Gaussian beam radius, and a is the fiber core radius. V =159. The incident Gaussian beam is supposed to axialsymmetrically launch into the fiber core. Other high modes, e.g. HE17 , HE18 , etc., are not shown here, since they all have small excitation efficiency around w1 /a=0.7, while we are more concerned with the fundamental mode HE11 . A maximal excitation efficiency of HE11 is about 95% around w1 /a=0.68. Under this condition, the optimal beam diameter 2w1 is 34 µm for a liquid core fiber of diameter 50 µm. The relative mode excitation efficiency is insensitive to the change of V . 5.2.3 Bending induced birefringence For an ideally manufactured and straight fiber without external stress, electromagnetic fields or imperfections, the excited modes from the beginning of the fiber will 122 m 1 2 3 4 5 6 Um 2.4048 5.5201 8.6537 11.792 14.931 18.071 Table 5.1: The cutoff frequency Um for mode HE2m . Um are the roots of J0 (Um ) = 0. keep propagating as described by the Equation 5.8 within the weakly guiding approximation, until it exits from the end of the fiber. In practice, if a fiber is longer than several meters, it is inevitably bent in operation. In our experiments for the measurement of optical rotation, a 10-m-long fiber needs to be curled for many loops. However, the bending of a fiber will introduce birefringence, as the each linearly polarized guiding mode (HE1m ) has two degenerate modes, which also applies for the fundamental mode HE11 in all fibers, no matter it is single-mode or multimode [123, 124, 114]. In addition, since the bending of fiber violates the ideal circular symmetry of a step-index fiber, it also induces mode conversion, which leads to optical loss and depolarization, as well as birefringence. In this section, the bending induced birefringence for an individual mode will be studied, while the bending induced mode conversion will be introduced in the next section. For the guiding modes HE1m , since each mode has two degenerate and orthogonal modes, the x− and y− polarized modes, their propagation constants βx and βy are not equal to each other, if the fiber’s circular and axial symmetry is violated by bending, as shown in Figure 5.20, the fiber is linearly birefringent. The difference βx − βy is known as the linear birefringence. If βy > βx , the phase velocity of x−polarized mode is fast than that of the y−polarized mode, then the x axis is called fast axis of the birefringent fiber. If βy < βx , the y axis is the fast axis. The linear birefringence is defined as 123 Bl = βx − βy = nx − ny , k (5.20) where nx and ny is the effective index for x− and y−polarized modes in the fiber. For a fiber is under distortion, in a magnetic fields, or the fiber core is composed of chiral material, it also induced circular birefringence, as a fiber also supports two circularly polarized modes that propagate with two propagation constants, βR and βL . Figure 5.20: A bent liquid core fiber with radius R. For fused silica cladding, the plane of curvature is the fast plane. For a liquid core fiber bent locally in a circular arc of radius R shown in Figure 5.20, the inner and outer boundaries of the cladding arc is different, because the arc length is either elongated or compressed by bending. Strictly speaking, the tension exerted on the inner cladding and outer cladding is slight different, here for qualitative analysis, the detailed computation is not included. Due to the deformation caused by bending, the index of cladding will also be changed due to the a mechanical stress effect [114]. From the mechanical analysis and numerical calculation in Reference [114, 117], it is found that the plane of curvature is the fast plane. Recall from Equation 5.10 and 5.11, q V = k0 a n21 − n22 124 (5.21a) b= n2e − n22 n21 − n22 (5.21b) In first order approximation, ne ∼ n1 ∼ n2 , then from Equation 5.21b, we can obtain ne ≈ n2 + b(n1 − n2 ) (5.22) Therefore, in the liquid core fiber, let alone the thermal fluctuation or some other effects on the liquid core, normally only the cladding index n2 will be changed in a bent fiber. Now suppose there is a small perturbation, ∆n2 , exerted on the cladding index n2 , then the small change of the effective index ne according to ∆n2 is ∆ne = (1 − b)∆n2 + ∆b · (n1 − n2 ) (5.23) Actually, for fixed l and m, b is a function of V , determined numerically, so db ∂V db −V · n2 ∂b = = ∂n2 dV ∂n2 dV n21 − n22 (5.24) Apply the first approximation again, n1 + n2 ∼ 2n1 , it follows that ∂b V db (n1 − n2 ) = − ∂n2 2 dV (5.25) Finally, the variation of ne in terms of the perturbation of n2 is concluded as ∆ne = (1 − b)∆n2 − V db ∆n2 2 dV V db = (1 − b − )∆n2 2 dV (5.26) In a bent liquid core fiber, the parameter b is still the same for x− and y−polarized modes in the same HE1m mode, while n2 is usually different since the fiber is anisotropic after bending. If the fiber is bent such that the effective index ne for the 125 two degenerate modes, x− and y−polarization modes, are different, especially when one of polarization modes is on the plane of curvature while the other one is normal to, as shown in Figure 5.20, then the linear birefringence could be given as Bl ≈ V db 1−b− 2 dV ∆n2(x) − ∆n2(y) (5.27) The linear birefringence acts like a linear phase retarder, delay the phase of the polarized mode in slow-axis, resulting in a elliptic polarization. Since the fiber is curled by many loops, it induces periodical changing of birefringence, where the beat length LB could be defined as LB ≈ 1−b− V db 2 dV λ ∆n2(x) − ∆n2(y) . (5.28) When the light inside the bent fiber propagates for every length LB , the polarization state restores to the original state, therefore an initial linearly polarized light becomes elliptically polarized (0<δ<90◦ ), circularly polarized when a 90◦ linear phase shift is achieved as happens in a quarter-wave (λ/4) plate, then go back to elliptically polarized (90◦ <δ<180◦ ), and becomes linearly polarized again when the phase shift reaches 180◦ . In the remaining half circle, the phase shift δ goes from 180◦ to 360◦ , running over elliptic, circular and linear polarizations again. The periodic polarization transformation is illustrated in Figure 5.21. Another period begins, when the light propagates in the subsequent beat length. For single-mode fiber, with appropriate bending, the emerging light beam from the exit of fiber could be still linearly polarized, providing the phase shifts between the degenerate modes is times of 180◦ . In a multimode fiber, it is more complicated, the beat length LB for each mode is not the same, since blm is different for each modes. Besides the linear birefringence, in the presence of distortion, external magnetic field or the liquid in the core is chiral, all of which induce optical rotations via circular 126 Fast axis Slow axis gth n e l t Bea Figure 5.21: Periodic phase shift in a linear birefringent fiber. In one beam length, the phase shift δ is changing from 0 to 360◦ . birefringence, there will be a superposition of the circular birefringence and bending induced linear birefringence effects, and the fiber behaves as linear phase retarder and polarization rotator simultaneously. For an infinitesimal piece of fiber with length ∆L, suppose the linear birefringence induces a linear phase shift δ and an optical rotation α, from Jones calculus and previous results in the case of coexistence of two types of birefringence [125], Ex Ey l1 +∆l A −B Ex = B A∗ Ey (5.29) l1 where φ φ A = cos + i · cos χ sin 2 2 (5.30a) φ B = sin χ sin 2 (5.30b) 127 2 φ 2 δ = + α2 2 2 tan χ = α δ/2 (5.30c) (5.30d) When there is no circular birefringence, from Equation 5.30c φ=δ (5.31) which means the fiber is purely linear birefringent, performing as a pure linear phase retarder. When the linear phase shift is much larger than the optical rotation angle α, then φ |αδ ∼ δ + 2α2 + O [α] 4 δ (5.32) which means that the linear phase shift δ dominates the whole phase shift, while the small circular birefringence rotation angle α is suppressed into second order, and even dividing a larger δ. This effect seriously deteriorates the measurement of optical rotation, for example, the actual Faraday rotation will be reduced much more than a half. But when there is a circular birefringence rotation angle α that is much larger than a linear birefringence phase shift δ, from Equation 5.30c, φ |δα ∼ 2α + δ2 + O [δ] 4 4α (5.33) which means the dependence of φ on δ is reduced to 2nd order, as well as dividing a large α, ∆φ ∼ δ 2 /(4α). Therefore, when β δ, the linear birefringence phase shift δ could be neglected. Therefore, here comes a simple method to suppress linear birefringence in a bent fiber: filling the fiber core with chiral liquids, which have 128 an larger rotation angle than the linear birefringence phase shift. This methods is applied in the Limonene filled fiber in our experiment. Since the linear phase shift is due to the birefringence of the fast- and slow-axis when light is guided in a bent fiber, there are some methods devoted to compensate the phase shifts between these two axis. One way is curling the fiber into two loops at right angles to each other and forming a right-angle figure 8 configuration [126], as shown in Figure 5.22(a). In this right-angle 8 configuration, the fast- and slow-plane is interchanged, when two linear polarized modes enter into the two orthogonal loops alternatively, thereby the effects of fast- and slow-plane are applied on the x− and y−polarized modes equally after the light exits from these double circles. The other method is implementing a Faraday rotator mirror (also called ortho-conjugation reflector) [127, 128, 129], which could coupled the light back in the fiber with modes conjugation, as shown in Figure 5.22(b). For the light emerging from a linearly birefringent fiber, the Faraday rotator consisting of a permanent magnet is configuration that it could rotate the light polarization plane with 45◦ for each pass, then it induced a 90◦ rotation after the light is reflected from a conjugated mirror, which could collimate the light beam back into the fiber. Finally, when the light is coupled back into the fiber, the mode propagated in fast axis is now propagating in the slow axis, therefore the total phase shift is equalized for both modes. Of course, these two methods are only effective when the circular birefringence arising from chiral liquid or Faraday rotation is stronger than the linear birefringence arising from the fiber, otherwise the circular birefringence is suppressed by the linear birefringence. Also, the fiber should be operated to guide fundamental mode mainly via optimal mode matching as far as possible, since using neither of these two methods could not compensate the intermodal phase shift. 129 Figure 5.22: Right-angle 8-configuration and Faraday rotator mirror. Both of these two methods are used to compensate the phase shift between fast- and slow-axis of the guiding light beam. 5.2.4 Mode conversion and bandwidth of multimode fiber The mode matching described in Section 5.2.2 only involves the mode excitation when the light beam is coupled into the fiber. When the light is guided inside the fiber for some length, there will inevitably induced some mode conversion [130], or named as mode coupling, which transfer one mode into other modes, leading to power and polarization state redistribution. The mode conversion could occurs when there is scattering, external field turbulence [131], distortion [132, 122] and especially the bending of fiber [133, 122, 134, 135]. When the fiber is coiled in many loops densely, the distortion that is induced when curling the fiber induces strong mode conversion, and thereby depolarization and pulse dispersion. This case occurs in our experiments, as we need to coil a 10-m-long fiber with a small radius < 2cm, then the mechanical tension and distortion exerted on the inner layers of fiber is considerable. Therefore, the fiber distortion is one of the main problems in our experiments, as well as the dust issue in liquid core fibers. Of course these two issues could be solved partially when the fiber is curled uniformly and cleanly handled with extra microfilter. Apart from linear birefringence, the inevitable bending of fiber also have several unfavorable effects on the light propagation, as well as in the measurement of optical rotation, which will be covered in several aspects as follows. 130 In most cases, as long as the fiber imperfection is not considerable and distortion is controlled well when curling a long fiber, the bending is the main source contributing to the mode conversion [92, 136, 122], and the bending induced mode conversion (or called mode coupling) has been confirmed experimentally and explained theoretically [136, 130, 137, 138, 139, 140, 135]. In the region that the fiber is bent, the geometry condition differs from the circular and axial symmetry in a straight fiber, so the mode structures and field distributions in this region are also distinct from the straight region. Some analysis based on perturbation theory could explain most phenomenon about mode conversion in the curved region [134, 135, 137], and it is concluded as each HE1m modes excited by the axially incidence Gaussian beam only couples to the HE2m , HE2,m−1 , TE0,m and TE0,m−1 [134]; In particular, the fundamental mode HE11 only couples to the HE21 and TE01 , which means the mode only strongly couples with its adjacent modes in terms of l and m; In addition, it is also shown that the polarization direction of all modes except the HE1m modes changes [137], and field distributions are also deformed in the plane of curvature [138, 137, 141]. The bending of fiber, not only leads to linear birefringence for any linearly polarized mode in all fibers as described in Section 5.2.3, but also induces optical loss, pulse dispersion and depolarization, because the fundamental mode could be coupled into higher modes in a multimode fiber. As described in Section 5.2.1, higher modes distribute more and more power in the cladding. The mode conversion into higher modes will leave the light waveguide vulnerable to external perturbation. Furthermore, high order modes will transform into radiation modes in some possibility in bending area, resulting in optical loss. As to the large core multimode fibers used in our experiments, a =25µm, V =80 for Limonene and 159 for Toluene, the optical leaking via cladding is negligible, as well as the PCF fiber (HC-800-1), but the power attenuation is due to liquid imperfection and dust. As we have tested, the strong optical loss in Teflon AF tubing is mainly 131 due to scattering even when the tubing is slightly bent, as the inner wall quality of the Teflon AF tubing is not very good. The mode conversion from the fundamental mode HE11 to higher modes induces birefringence and depolarization. If the fundamental modes is converted into HE1m modes through first order and higher order conversion, the propagation constant blm is different for them, which leads to some difference between their phase velocity and group velocity. Although the phase shift in two degenerate modes in each HE1m modes (name as intramodal birefringence) could be compensated in some configuration as shown in Figure 5.22, the intermodal phase shift is not easy to handle. As we explored, the Toluene or Xylene core fiber appears significant intramodal and intermodal linear birefringence, which surpasses the Faraday rotation. Only when we use Limonene, the optical rotation could be observed repeatably, since the chiral induced optical rotation is much larger than the intermodal and intramodal linear birefringence. Apart from birefringence, the depolarization is an inevitable problem throughout all of our measurements about liquid core fibers. The depolarization is induced because the HE1m modes is coupled into non-polarized modes, e.g. HE11 could be significantly converted into TE01 , which is actually a scalar mode without polarization; For l ≥ 2, most HElm modes, e.g. HE21 , are also non-polarized [117]. Since the coil diameter for fiber in our experiment is < 2 cm, then mode conversion into non-polarized modes is considerable. As we measured, the maximal polarization ratio we could get is about 60% for a densely coiled liquid core fiber, while it could reach >90% for a relatively short and non-curved one. As stated above, after mode conversion in a multimode fiber, many modes could be excited in the same fiber, the phase velocity νph for mode LPlm (HEl+1,m ) is, νph = c c c ω = ≈ ≈ (1 + ∆1 − blm ∆1 ) β ne n2 + blm (n1 + n2 ) n1 132 (5.34) where ∆1 = (n1 − n2 )/n1 . The phase speed is between c/n1 and c/n2 , because 0 < blm < 1. Similarly, for a fiber length L, the group velocity is given [117] as νgr = dβ = dω c d(kne ) dk = d (kn1 ) dk c − ∆1 n1 1 − d dV (V blm ) (5.35) Because the propagation constant blm depends on the mode number l and m, then the phase velocity νph and group velocity νgr differs among different modes, which results in intermodal dispersion for long distance light propagation. The effect of intermodal dispersion introduces pulse distortion and broadening. The intermodal phase shift between two modes LPl1 m1 and LPl2 m2 is θl2 m2 − θl1 m1 = ωL (n1 − n2 ) (bl1 m1 − bl2 m2 ) c (5.36) For a ω=115 MHz, L=10 m, n1 =1.484 and n2 =1.4696, we can find the maximal phase shift between two different modes is 20◦ . In addition, the intramodal phase shift, e.g. for the fundamental mode HE11 , is |θx − θy | = V db ωL · (1 − b − )∆n2 , c 2 dV (5.37) which results in a rotation angle ∼1.1◦ (∆n2 is adopted from the calculation in [142], when acl =180µm, bending radius R =1.9 cm). Although for HE11 mode, the phase shift is pretty small, it is increasing fast for higher modes. Therefore, if the fiber is bent and twisted so that the fundamental mode is converted into higher modes, larger phase shift will be induced. When the phase shift is considerable comparing with the signal phase period 2π (360◦ ), the high frequency signal will be attenuated according to the interference between different modes, thus limiting the bandwidth of the signal. The difference of intramodal phase velocity and group velocity also exists for a single-mode fiber, because of the propagation constant shift on the fast- and 133 slow-axis on a anisotropic fiber. Both the intermodal and intramodal dispersion limit the bandwidth of the light signal for transmission. Axial ray impulse input Extreme meridional ray Dispersive output Figure 5.23: The axial ray and extreme meridional ray. The distance difference induces the phase time delay, thereby the phase delay, at the output. As a result, an impulse input with gives a dispersive output with finite time width δt. Here we show a simple model for the bandwidth of multimode fiber (intermodal dispersion) based on the classical analysis of geometric optics theory. As shown in Figure 5.23, for a multimode fiber, when the light beam is coupled into the fiber, there are many choices incident angle as long as the the first reflection angle of the light beam is less than the critical angle θc , where the critical angle is defined as sin θc = n2 /n1 under the total internal reflection condition. In this figure, it shows the axial ray (blue), as well as the extreme meridional ray (red) (reflection angle = θc ). The axial ray has a shortest distance during propagation inside the fiber, while the extreme meridional ray has a longest distance, which results in a time delay for them. The difference of distance shown here is equivalent to the difference in index in the analysis of wave optics in the previous context. The time delay could be easily calculated as Tmax = Ln1 c·cos θ Tmin = = Ln21 cn2 Ln1 c δt = Tmax − Tmin = (5.38) Ln21 cn2 − Ln1 c where L is the length of fiber, c is the light speed, and cos θ = sin θc . Because n1 − n2 n1 or n2 , the expression of δt could be further approximated as 134 Ln21 δt = cn2 n1 − n2 n1 ≈ L(n21 − n22 ) L(N A)2 = , 2cn1 2cn1 (5.39) where N A is the numerical aperture. Now assume an impulse input (i.e. all light components have the same phase) of light is injected into the fiber, the output beam will possess time width δt due to the time delay of different components of light. The output pulse with time width δt is thereby the impulse response of the fiber, 1 δt , |t| < δt 2, δt h(t) =0, |t| > 2 h(t) = (5.40) where the amplitude is 1/δt for normalization. The fourier transform H(f ) of the impulse response h(t) determines the frequency bandwidth of the impulse response as a output beam. H(f ) = F[h(t)] = sinc(f δt ), (sincx ≡ sin πx ) πx (5.41) as plotted in Figure 5.24. The first zero of H(f ) at 1/δt is defined as the essential bandwidth of fiber. In other words, from the geometric optics, the bandwidth of a multimode fiber is BW = 1 2cn1 = , δt L(N A)2 which is a good estimation for a multimode fiber. 135 (5.42) 1 Bandwidth 0 0 Figure 5.24: The frequency spectrum of impulse response h(t):H(f ) = sincf δt . The essential bandwidth of fiber is defined as the first zero at 1/δt. For a 10-m-long hollow fiber filled with Limonene, the bandwidth is about 2.0 GHz. This calculation is rough estimation, while a more accurate calculation is based on time-dependent power flow equation [143, 144, 145], but the bandwidth is still beyond 150 MHz. Since the optical rotation in high-field NSOR has a high frequency, e.g. 115 MHz for the 2.7 T magnet, the bandwidth of rotation signal should also be concerned. It is reported that an attenuation of 7 dB/km was achieved over kilometer lengths of liquid-core multimode optical fiber with up to hundreds of MHz bandwidth [92, 146]. However, in our experiment of the Limonene core fiber, when performing a high-frequency 115 MHz Faraday rotation measurement, we almost can only get <1% signal as expected from theoretical calculation, while in the low frequency (1-20 KHz) we can get a good agreement between measured value and theoretical value. It is possible that the bandwidth is limited by other instruments or some unknown effects arising from densely bent fiber. As far, for the Limonene core fiber, we have not achieved a high-bandwidth light guiding. 5.3 Experiments with hollow fibers The liquid core hollow fiber used in this section is the fused silica capillary tubing filled with liquids, so only liquids with high index (n>1.47), for example, Toluene, Xylene 136 and Limonene, could guide light throughout the fiber. As far as we attempted, thin hollow fibers with OD≤150 µm tend to be bent in the beginning, resulting in a poor mode matching and high degree of mode conversion in the beginning part of the fiber; For the hollow fibers with ID < 10 µm, it is vulnerable to liquid imperfection, such as dust, although we have implemented microfilter (frit size ∼ 1-2 µm). Capillary tubings with relative thick diameter (OD=360 µm) and large core (ID=50∼150 µm) is favorable for the easy of practical operations in liquid filling and optical alignment to approach optimal mode matching. As described in Section 5.2.1, when a ID=50 µm capillary tubing is filled with Toluene and Limonene, it becomes a multimode step-index fiber, with high normalized frequency V =159 and V = 80 respectively. In order to mainly excite the fundamental mode in the multimode fiber, a mode matching condition w1 /a = 0.68 should be applied in terms of the choice of lens and incident beam diameter, as well as injecting the Gaussian beam axially symmetrical to the fiber core. In practice, the beam alignment is not perfect and the bending of fiber induces birefringence and depolarization, as discussed in Section 5.2.3 and 5.2.4, we could not obtain a perfect linearly polarized output light beam emerging from the fiber. In this section, the transmission increment is described as a practical issue discovered in Toluene and Limonene core fiber. In Subsection 5.3.2, the depolarization for all liquid core fibers and large linear birefringence in Toluene core fiber is discussed. In the final subsection, we found the choice of chiral liquids (Limonene) suppresses the linear birefringence, and a Faraday rotation test under low frequency is performed, while this test under high frequency is not successful, mainly due to the bandwidth limitation arising from intramodal and intermodal dispersion. 137 5.3.1 Transmission increase The first step in manufacturing a liquid core fiber is filling pure liquid into a hollow fiber. In our experiment, we filled Toluene and Limonene in fused silica capillary tubings. Since the index of Toluene and Limonene is higher than fused silica, light could be guided in this step-index fiber. When the light is coupled into these fibers, we found that it could not reach a maximal transmission in short time, especially for a long liquid core fiber. Although it is not related to the physical insights in optical rotation experiments, technically speaking, it obstructs all the liquid-core fiber based measurements and attenuates the signal-to-noise ratio if the light transmission is low. 1.2 5m fiber Light intensity [mW] 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 5 10 Time [hour] 15 20 Figure 5.25: Transmission increase in 5-m-long hollow fiber. The liquid filled in the fiber core is Limonene. The ID of fiber is 50 µm. The input power is 12.5 mW. Figure 5.25 shows a typical slow transmission increase in a 5m-long hollow fiber filled with Limonene. Once the liquid is filled in the fiber and all the openings are closed up, the liquid become static inside the fiber core. Soon after the light is launched into fiber, some transmission is immediately set up in seconds. As shown in Figure 5.25, about 0.17 mW power could be detected in the output. However, as time 138 goes on, the transmission slowly increase, and finally reach a maximal value after 20 hours. If the transmission is expressed in a exponential form I0 (1 − e−t/T ), the time constant is in Figure 5.25 is estimated as 4 hours. For short fiber, the time constant is much short, e.g. for a 50cm-long fiber, time constant is around 10 minutes. As the length increases, the time constant grow rapidly. In addition, for different liquids, the time constant for Toluene is less than Limonene significantly. As the fiber connector and fiber cleaving is checked carefully, it is confirmed that the slow transmission increment arises from the liquid core fiber itself. The slow transmission increase is possibly due to small bubbles induced by the gas dissolved in liquids, thermal effects, e.g. thermal lensing or impurities in liquids. In order to explain possible reason for this issue, we used degassed Limonene processed through liquid nitrogen degasification technique, as well as use helium gas to pump the liquid into fibers as helium normally has a small solubility in liquids, but it did not help speed up the transmission increment. Since the slow transmission and equilibrium looks like a thermal equilibrium, we guess there is some thermal effects when the light is propagating in the liquid medium. A typical thermal effect is the thermal lensing, the liquid region is hotter on the beam axis, compared with the outer regions, causing some transverse gradient of the refractive index. The thermal lensing occurred in fibers will change the propagating angle of guiding light and cause optical leakage from the cladding when the angle is larger than critical angle. But in the long term, when the liquid in the whole fiber is heat up sufficiently and achieve some point of equilibrium, the optical loss will be much smaller, then a maximal transmission is reached. This explanation is consistent with the transmission loss when the liquid become flowing, as shown in Figure 5.26, and then after stopping the liquid flow, the equilibrium well set up again after long time. Another possible reason is liquid impurities arising from external contamination or photochemical reactions under laser illumination, which might have some absorption 139 1 0.9 5m fiber Release flow valve Light intensity [mW] 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0 100 200 300 Time [s] 400 500 600 Figure 5.26: Transmission drop when the liquid is flowing. Tested in 5 m, ID=150 µm fiber filled with Limonene. The orange line indicates the time when the liquid valve is released. of 405 nm laser and it finally becomes saturated after long time exposure under light. Figure 5.27 shows a comparison of a fresh fiber and a reused fiber. Here, fresh means it is the first time to use the fiber, while a reused fiber refer to liquid core fibers that have been illuminated with light and reflowed with liquids. It seems that, for a 50cm-long fiber, the time constant for a fresh fiber is very short, while it is much longer in a reused fiber. Therefore, some external contamination or photochemical reactions introduces some impurities into the fiber and they have some affinity to the inner surface of the hollow fiber. As far, we have not completely explain the slow transmission increase, the only method to overcome this problem is just wait for long time until the light transmission reaches maximum, because we found that the equilibrium transmission state could be maintained stably for more than one day. 5.3.2 Depolarization and linear birefringence In this thesis, the key component for the high-field NSOR measurement is a long but densely coiled liquid core fiber. Due to the bending of fiber, the linear birefringence and depolarization inevitably occurs, as discussed theoretically in Section 5.2.3 and 140 1.8 1.2 1.6 Fresh fiber 1.2 Light intensity [mW] Light intensity [mW] 1.4 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 0.2 0 Reused fiber 1 100 200 Time [s] 300 400 0.2 0 1000 2000 Time [s] 3000 Figure 5.27: The comparison of transmission in a fresh fiber and a reused fiber. Tested in a 50 cm, ID=150 µm fiber filled with Limonene. 5.2.4. The output light beam emerging from the liquid core fiber is partially depolarized, partially circular polarized and partially linearly polarized. Here we define polarization linearity as the ratio of linear polarization of light. The measurement of polarization linearity is performed in an apparatus illustrated in Figure 5.28. In this scheme, a linearly polarized laser beam is injected into a densely coiled liquid core fiber, and the output light beam exiting from the other end of the fiber is analyzed by a rotating half wave plate (λ/2 waveplate for 405 nm) and a polarimetry. The depolarized and circular polarized parts of the light will not be affected by the half wave pate, but only the linear polarized part of the light is rotated by the half wave plate. Once the half waveplate rotates about an angle θ, the linear polarization plane of the light is rotated by an angle 2θ. Thus when the half waveplate is continuously rotating with aid of a stepper motor, the linear polarization plane of the output beam is thereby rotating periodically, then the light intensity received by two photodiode after the polarization beam splitter also oscillates. 141 4000 Rotating λ/2 Waveplate Linear polarizer polarizing beam splitter Photodiode Laser Liquid Core fiber Photodiode Figure 5.28: Measurement of polarization linearity of the light emerging from the liquid core fiber. The polarization is rotated by a λ/2 waveplate. Powered by a stepper motor, the λ/2 waveplate is continuously rotating at low frequency. The oscillating light intensity of two channels of photodiodes is plotted in Figure 5.29. The waveplate is driven to rotate at 1.4 Hz, then the oscillating frequency is 2.8 Hz. As we can see from this figure, the two sum of the two channels keeps as a constant value 1.3 mW, because the whole intensity from the two channels is conserved no matter how the waveplate is rotating or polarization beam splitter is placed. If the light beam is completely polarized, the peak-to-peak amplitude is equal to the sum. As shown in this figure, the peak-to-peak amplitude of each channel is about about 0.4 mW, which actually means only this part of light could be modulated by the half wave plate, in other words, this part of light is linearly polarized. Therefore, the fraction of linear polarization, polarization linearity, is about 30%. Thereby, if there is a small optical rotation signal for measurement, the denominator in calculation formula for rotation angle in Equation 3.4 should be take the effective value as 0.4 mW×2 = 0.8 mW, instead of 1.3 mW×2 = 2.6 mW. The signal-to-noise ratio is attenuated, because the ratio of linear polarization is reduced for the same transmission. 142 Figure 5.29: Output light intensity from two channels after periodically modulated by a rotating λ/2 waveplate. It is measured in a 4-m-long fiber filled with Toluene. The modulation frequency of the rotating λ/2 waveplate is 1.4 Hz. Besides the depolarization that could be measured in the above method, another effect, the linear birefringence, also plays an important role in the polarization linearity. From the discussion in Section 5.2.3 as shown in Figure 5.21, due to the intramodal or intermodal linear phase shift, the polarization part of the light is periodically changing. This effect keeps the polarization, but if it is in presence of a external field induced optical rotation, it could suppress the optical rotation when the optical rotation angle is much smaller than the linear phase shift. We observe this effect in the Toluene filled liquid core fiber. When measuring the polarization linearity, we can always get a considerable value in the final output beam by properly bend or twist the fiber at some local region, which also means the beat length is short. However, once we perform the measurement of Faraday rotation, we can only get a small rotation angle which is just 1%-20% of theoretical value, depending on the fiber coil diameter and loop number. If the 8-m-long fiber is coiled densely with a diameter of 2 inch, the measure rotation angle is negligible. It confirms that the Faraday 143 rotation induced circular birefringence is almost suppressed by linear birefringence arising from the bent fiber, because the Faraday rotation angle is normally smaller than 1◦ for liquid in this configuration even with a strong current of several amperes. Since the NSOR angle is even smaller than Faraday rotation, due to the low nuclear spin polarization, then it is impossible to detect NSOR signal for Toluene in a liquid core fiber. One way to suppress the linear birefringence effect is to use chiral liquids instead of Toluene, which will be covered in next section. 5.3.3 Chiral liquids Based on the argument in Section 5.2.3, if a optical rotation arising from circular birefringence prevails the linear phase shift arising from the linear birefringence of the fiber, then the bending induced linear birefringence in a curved fiber could be suppressed. Filling the fiber core with chiral liquids is a good method, since lots of chiral liquids have a large optical rotation, while other methods inducing circular birefringence have some drawbacks; for example, the twist of fiber is not easy to control in this experiment, and the electromagnetic field induced optical rotation (e.g. Faraday rotation) has a too small rotation angle, which is usually smaller than linear phase shift. The chiral liquid Limonene ((R)-(+) Limonene or (L)-(-)-Limonene) is a good choice for measurement, because it has a large specific rotation constant ◦ −1 3 −1 [α]20 D ≈120 (dm [g/cm ] )) and a large enough index n = 1.484 (405 nm). First we perform the measurement of Faraday rotation of Limonene filled hollow fibers at low frequency (f =1 kHz∼20 kHz), which could be realized easily based on the instruments used in the NSOR experiment at low fields. The apparatus takes the similar form as shown in Figure 3.23, but the sample cell is replaced by the densely coiled fiber of 8 meters. As shown in Figure 5.30, the 8m-long fiber is wound densely around a Teflon rod with a diameter of 2 inch; a thick copper wire passes through 144 the center of the fiber coil with axial symmetry, in which a strong current oscillating at kHz frequency is running. R I Figure 5.30: The measurement of Faraday rotation in a long coiled fiber at low frequency. The fiber is wound around a Teflon rod with diameter of 2 inch. The straight thick copper wire passes through the center of the fiber coil with axial symmetry. In this configuration, the optical rotation induced by the Limonene ((D)-(+)◦ −1 3 −1 Limonene, Sigma Aldrich, >97%, [α]20 D ≈120 (dm [g/cm ] )) in each loop is about 161◦ , which is a very large angle, while the Faraday rotation angle in this configuration is typically smaller than 1◦ . Here, the dispersion of two circular polarized components because of the slight index difference arising from circular birefringence is just 0.0016◦ for a 10-m-long fiber, which could be neglected in terms of the effects on bandwidth. The incident 13.8 mW laser beam at 405 nm gives a output light beam with intensity of 0.372 mW, so the light coupling efficiency is about 3% in this 8-m-long and densely coiled fiber. The effective polarization of the output light beam is about 33%, according to the measurement as shown in Figure 5.28 and Figure 5.29. The AC current on the wire creates a circular magnetic field parallel to the fiber although the fiber coil, and the magnitude of the field is determined by µ0 I , πD 145 B= (5.43) where, I is the current, D is the diameter of the fiber coil. When I=1 A, the magnetic field is 0.079 G. First, the Verdet constant Vd of Limonene is measured as 10.42µrad/(G · cm) at 405 nm in a cylindrical cell as shown in Figure 5.30. The calculated Faraday optical rotation angle in this coiled-fiber configuration is θ = Vd LB =10.42µrad/(G · cm) × 8m×0.079G=0.658mrad, while the measured optical rotation angle is 0.708 mrad (i.e. Vd =11.21 µrad/(G · cm)), about 7% larger than the theoretical value, which is tolerant due to the measurement error in current source, fiber length, light intensity and polarization ratio. We also perform the measurement in a toroid coil as shown in Figure 5.3, which is configured for high field magnetic field. The measured rotation constant is about 3.3µrad/(G · cm), only 33% of the Verdet constant, which may be because of the inhomogeneous field distribution of the toroid coil, as well as unexpected fiber distortion when the fiber is curled more densely and confined by the copper coil. When changing the current frequency from 1 kHz to 20 kHz, this value almost keeps the same with about 2% tolerance, which means the bandwidth of this fiber is at least larger than 20 kHz. The high-frequency Faraday rotation of Limonene inside hollow fibers is measured with a toroid coil and a 115 MHz RF current source via RF power amplifier, then the current could goes up to several amperes. However, we only get about less than 1% rotation signal comparing with theoretical calculation. Therefore, the NSOR experiment could not be carried out, because the optical rotation is even much smaller than Faraday rotation, and the signal is too small to detect due to the low signalto-noise ratio. The only explanation for this unexpected small result is that the bandwidth is limited by some instruments or unknown effects in densely bent fiber. The way to improve the bandwidth is achieving a nearly single-mode liquid-core fiber, as well as reducing dust and impurities in liquids and avoiding fiber distortion when curling the long fiber. 146 Chapter 6 Conclusions In this work, we explore potential applications of Nuclear Spin induced Optical Rotation in the area of chemistry. Based on the continuous-wave spin-lock technique under a low magnetic field (5 Gauss), we perform precision measurements of NSOR signal for several pure organic liquids that contain the nucleus 1 H, and find that it is able to clearly distinguish some of these chemicals by means of NSOR at low fields. With aid of a multipass cavity, the optical path is elongated to about 3 meters, which improves the sensitivity of NSOR, as the optical rotation signal is proportional to the length of optical path. In addition, a 405 nm laser is implemented to get a larger optical rotation angle, as well as to obtain lowest absorptions of light in those chemicals. Combining these two techniques, we succeed to achieve a large Signal-to-Noise ratio of NSOR detection, thereby demonstrate the capability of distinguishing 1 H in different chemicals through NSOR. In addition, we also manage to measure the NSOR signal of 19 F at low fields, which has a much larger optical rotation constant than 1 H. All of our experimental results agree with quantitative analysis based on first-principle quantum chemistry calculations. In order to extend applications of NSOR to measure signals of the same type of nuclei inside a molecule via chemical shifts, we explore an experimental scheme 147 based on liquid-core hollow fibers to approach the measurement of NSOR under high magnetic fields, as well as set up a new type of nanoliter NMR. By filling liquids inside a long hollow fiber and coiling it densely, it is possible to detect NSOR signals with a long optical path, as well as higher spin polarizations and distinguishable chemical shifts, inside a narrow core of a superconducting magnet. According to our attempts, because of the robustness and low-cost of fused silica capillary tubings, filling highindex liquids in those tubings is an appropriate choice of liquid-core fiber in practice. By coiling a long fiber densely for many loops around a small rod, we find that it is possible to measure optical rotation signals inside a narrow-bore superconducting magnet. However, those liquid-core capillary tubings perform like multimode stepindex fibers, and thereby exhibit linear birefringence and depolarization, significantly reducing the light polarization for the measurement of optical rotation. Based on the theory of birefringence in fibers, we succeed to suppress the linear birefringence by filling chiral liquids in hollow fibers, and approach near single-mode operation by means of launching light beam into the fiber core under the mode match condition. As far as we have explored, NSOR signal in bent liquid-core fiber has not been obtained at high frequency. The best solution to realized the high-field NSOR is to implement a single-mode polarization maintaining liquid core fiber, which might become possible in near future due to the recent advances in photonic crystal fiber [99, 100, 147, 148, 149]. 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