|
Home Page | Products | Contact Us | News & Events | Request Info. |
||||
|
|
The Optics of Spectroscopy |
|
||
|
|
||||
|
|
Section 1: Diffraction Gratings Ruled & HolographicDiffraction gratings are manufactured either classically with the use of a ruling engine by burnishing grooves with a diamond stylus or holographically with the use of interference fringes generated at the intersection of two laser beams. (For more details see Diffraction Gratings Ruled & Holographic Handbook, Reference 1.) Classically ruled gratings may be plano or concave and possess grooves each parallel with the next. Holographic grating grooves may be either parallel or of unequal distribution in order that system performance may be optimised. Holographic gratings are generated on plano, spherical, toroidal, and many other surfaces.
Regardless
of the shape of the surface or whether classically ruled or
holographic, the text that follows is equally applicable to each.
Where there are differences, these are explained. 1.1 Basic EquationsBefore introducing the basic equations, a brief note on monochromatic light and continuous spectra must first be considered. Monochromatic light has infinitely narrow spectral width. Good sources which approximate such light include single mode lasers and very low pressure, cooled spectral calibration lamps. These are also variously known as "line" or "discrete line" sources. A continuous spectrum has finite spectral width, e.g. "white light". In principle all wavelengths are present, but in practice a "continuum" is almost always a segment of a spectrum. Sometimes a continuous spectral segment may be only a few parts of a nanometre wide and resemble a line spectrum. The equations that follow are for systems in air where m0 = 1. Therefore, l = l0 = wavelength in air.
Definitions
Units
alpha -
angle of incidence degrees The most fundamental grating equation is given by:
In most monochromators the location of the entrance and exit slits are fixed and the grating rotates around a plane through the centre of its face. The angle, Dv, is, therefore, a constant determined by:
If the value of alpha and beta is to be determined for a given wavelength, lambda, the grating equation (11) may be expressed as:
Assuming
the value Equations (12) and (1-3). See Figs. 1 and 2 and Section
2.6.
Table 1 shows how alpha and beta vary depending on the deviation angle for a 1200 g/mm grating set to diffract 500 nm in a monochromator geometry based on Fig. 1.
1.2 Angular Dispersion
dbeta angular separation between two wavelengths (radians)
dlamda
differential separation between two wavelengths nm 1.3 Linear DispersionLinear dispersion defines the extent to which a spectral interval is spread out across the focal field of a spectrometer and is expressed in nm/mm, °A/mm, cm-l/mm, etc. For example, consider two spectrometers: one instrument disperses a 0.1 nm spectral segment over 1 mm while the other takes a 10 nm spectral segment and spreads it over 1 mm. It is easy to imagine that fine spectral detail would be more easily identified in the first instrument than the second. The second instrument demonstrates "low" dispersion compared to the "higher" dispersion of the first. Linear dispersion is associated with an instrument's ability to resolve fine spectral detail. Linear dispersion perpendicular to the diffracted beam at a central wavelength, A, is given by:
where LB is the effective exit focal length in mm and dx is the unit interval in mm. See Fig. 1. In a monochromator, LB is the arm length from the focusing mirror to the exit slit or if the grating is concave, from the grating to the exit slit. Linear dispersion, therefore, varies directly with cos beta, and inversely with the exit path length, LB, order, k, and groove density, n. In a spectrograph, the linear dispersion for any wavelength other than that wavelength which is normal to the spectral plane will be modified by the cosine of the angle of inclination (gamma) at wavelength Lambdan. Fig. 2 shows a "flat field" spectrograph as used with a linear diode array. Linear Dispersion
Figure 3 shows a first order spectrum from 200 to 1000 nm spread over a focal field in spectrograph configuration. From Equation (11) with a grating of given groove density and for a given value of alpha and beta:
so that if
the diffraction order k is doubled, lambda is halved, etc.
First order
wavelengths between 200 and 380 nm may be monitored without filters
because wavelengths below 190 nm are absorbed by air. If, however,
the instrument is evacuated or N2
purged, higher order filters would again be required. 1.5 Resolving "Power"
where, dlambda is the difference in wavelength between two spectral lines of equal intensity. Resolution is then the ability of the instrument to separate adjacent spectral lines. Two peaks are considered resolved if the distance between them is such that the maximum of one falls on the first minimum of the other. This is called the Rayleigh criterion. It may be shown that:
lambda - the central wavelength of the spectral line to be resolved Wg the illuminated width of the grating
N the
total number of grooves on the grating
The
numerical resolving power "R" should not be confused with
the resolution or bandpass of an instrument system (See
Section 2).
Theoretically,
a 1200 g/mm grating with a width of 110 mm that is used in first
order has a numerical resolving power R = 1200 x 110 = 132,000.
Therefore, at 500 nm, the bandpass
In a real
instrument, however, the geometry of use is fixed by Equation
(11). Solving for k:
But the
ruled width, Wg, of the grating:
after
substitution of (112) and (113) in (111).
Resolving
power may also be expressed as:
Consequently,
the resolving power of a grating is dependent on:
* The width
of the grating
* The
centre wavelength to be resolved
* The
geometry of the use conditions
Because
band pass is also determined by the slit width of the spectrometer
and residual system aberrations, an achieved band pass at this level
is only possible in diffraction limited instruments assuming an
unlikely 100% of theoretical. See
Section 2
for further discussion. 1.6 Blazed Gratings
A blazed
grating is one in which the grooves of the diffraction grating are
controlled to form right triangles with a "blaze angle, w,"
as shown in Fig. 4. However, apex angles up to 110° may be
present especially in blazed holographic gratings. The selection of
the peak angle of the triangular groove offers opportunity to
optimise the overall efficiency profile of the grating. 1.6.1 Littrow Condition
For
example, the blaze angle (w) for a 1200 g/mm grating blazed at 250 nm
is 8.63° in first order (k = 1).
1.6.2 Efficiency Profiles
% Absolute Efficiency = (energy out /energy in) X (100/1) (117)
% Relative Efficiency = (efficiency of the grating
/ efficiency of a mirror) X (100/1) (1-18)
Relative
efficiency measurements require the mirror to be coated with the same
material and used in the same angular configuration as the grating. See Figs. 5a and 5b for typical efficiency curves of a blazed, ruled grating, and a nonblazed, holographic grating, respectively.
As a
general approximation, for blazed gratings the strength of a signal
is reduced by 50% at two thirds the blaze wavelength, and 1.8 times
the blaze wavelength.
1.6.3 Efficiency and Order
*Efficiency
in higher orders usually follows the first order efficiency curve.
*For a
grating blazed in first order the maximum efficiency for each of the
subsequent higher orders decreases as the order k increases.
*The
efficiency also decreases the further offLittrow (alpha does not
equal beta) the grating is used.
Holographic
gratings may be designed with groove profiles that discriminate
against high orders. This may be particularly effective in the VUV
using laminar groove profiles created by ionetching.
Note: Just
because a grating is "nonblazed" does not necessarily
mean that it is less efficient! See Fig. 5b showing the efficiency
curve for an 1800 g/mm sinusoidal grooved holographic grating. 1.7 Diffraction Grating Stray Light
1.7.1 Scattered Light
(a)
Randomly scattered light due to surface imperfections on any optical surface.
(b) Focused
stray light due to nonperiodic errors in the ruling of grating grooves. 1.7.2 Ghosts
where, IG =ghost intensity IP = parent intensity n = groove density k =order e =error in the position of the grooves
1.8 Choice of Gratings1.8.1 When to Choose a Holographic Grating
1.8.2 When to Choose a Ruled Grating
Remember,
ghosts and subsequent stray light intensity are proportional to the
square of order and groove density (n2
and k2
from Equation (118)). Beware of using ruled gratings in high
order or with high groove density. |
|
Back to top | Home Page | Products | Contact Us | News & Events | Request Info. |
||||||||||||||
|
www.jyhoriba.co.uk |
|
|||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
Copyright © 2002 Jobin Yvon All rights reserved |
||||||||||||||