8 research outputs found

    Sensitive detection of nitric oxide using seeded parametric four-wave mixing

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    A sensitive near-resonant four-wave mixing technique based on two-photon parametric four-wave mixing has been developed. Seeded parametric four-wave mixing requires only a single laser as an additional phase matched seeder field is generated via parametric four-wave mixing of the pump beam in a high gain cell. The seeder field travels collinearly with the pump beam providing efficient nondegenerate four-wave mixing in a second medium. This simple arrangement facilitates the detection of complex molecular spectra by simply scanning the pump laser. Seeded parametric four-wave mixing is demonstrated in both a low pressure cell and an air/acetylene flame with detection of the two-photon C (2) Pi(upsilon'=0)<--X (2) Pi(upsilon =0) spectrum of nitric oxide. From the cell data a detection limit of 10(12) molecules/cm(3) is established. A theoretical model of seeded parametric four-wave mixing is developed from existing parametric four-wave mixing theory. The addition of the seeder field significantly modifies the parametric four-wave mixing behaviour such that in the small signal regime, the signal intensity can readily be made to scale as the cube of the laser pump power while the density dependence follows a more familiar square law dependence, In general, we find excellent agreement between theory and experiment. Limitations to the process result from an ac Stark shift of the two-photon resonance in the high pressure seeder cell caused by the generation of a strong seeder field, as well as a reduction in phase matching efficiency due to the presence of certain buffer species. Various optimizations are suggested which should overcome these limitations, providing even greater detection sensitivity. (C) 1998 American Institute of Physics, [S0021-9606(98)01014-9]

    Explosive sensing with fluorescent dendrimers: The role of collisional quenching

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    We have investigated a series of branched fluorescent sensing compounds with thiophene units in the arms and triphenylamine centers for the detection of nitrated model compounds for 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) and the plastic explosives taggant 2,3-dimethyl-2,3-dinitrobutane (DMNB). Stern-Volmer measurements in solution show that the fluorescence is more efficiently quenched by nitroaromatic compounds when compared to a non-nitrated quencher, benzophenone. Simple modification of the structure of the sensing compound was found to result in significant changes to the sensitivity and selectivity toward the nitrated analytes. A key result from time-resolved fluorescent measurements showed that the chromophore-analyte interaction was primarily a collisional process. This process is in contrast to conjugated polymers where static quenching dominates, a difference that could offer a potentially more powerful detection mechanism. © 2010 American Chemical Society

    Nanocrystals and Nanoparticles Versus Molecular Fluorescent Labels as Reporters for Bioanalysis and the Life Sciences: A Critical Comparison

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