Advanced time-resolved absorption spectroscopy with an ultrashort visible/near IR laser and a multi-channel lock-in detector

Proc Jpn Acad Ser B Phys Biol Sci. 2021;97(5):236-260. doi: 10.2183/pjab.97.014.

Abstract

Ultrashort visible-near infrared (NIR) pulse generation and its applications to ultrafast spectroscopy are discussed. Femtosecond pulses of around 800 nm from a Ti:sapphire laser are used as a pump of an optical parametric amplifier (OPA) in a non-collinear configuration to generate ultrashort visible (500-780 nm) pulses and deep-ultraviolet (DUV, 259-282 nm) pulses. The visible-NIR pulses and DUV pulses were compressed to 3.9 fs and 10.4 fs, respectively, and used to elucidate various ultrafast dynamics in condensed matter with a sub-10 fs resolution by pump-probe measurements. We have also developed a 128-channel lock-in amplifier. The combined system of the world-shortest visible pulse from the OPA and the lock-in amplifier with the world-largest channel-number can clarify the sub-10 fs-dynamics in condensed matter. This system clarified structural changes in an excited state, reaction intermediate, and a transition state. This is possible even during molecular vibration and reactions via a real-time-resolved vibronic spectrum, which provides molecular structural change information. Also, ultrafast dynamics in exotic materials like carbon nanotubes, topological insulators, and novel solar battery systems have been clarified. Furthermore, the carrier-envelope phase in the ultrashort pulse has been controlled and measured.

Keywords: multi-channel lock-in amplifier; optical parametric amplifier; phase matching; real-time vibrational spectrum; ultrafast spectroscopy; ultrashort pulse.

MeSH terms

  • Equipment Design
  • Infrared Rays
  • Kinetics
  • Lasers
  • Light
  • Nanotubes, Carbon / chemistry
  • Solar Energy
  • Spectrophotometry / instrumentation*
  • Time Factors
  • Vibration

Substances

  • Nanotubes, Carbon