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Time-Resolved Temperature-Jump Infrared Spectroscopy at a High Repetition Rate.

Gregory M GreethamIan P ClarkBenjamin YoungRobby FritschLucy MinnesNeil T HuntMike Towrie
Published in: Applied spectroscopy (2020)
Time-resolved temperature-jump infrared absorption spectroscopy at a 0.5 to 1 kHz repetition rate is presented. A 1 kHz neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:YAG) laser pumping an optical parametric oscillator provided >70 µJ, 3.75 µm pump pulses, which delivered a temperature jump via excitation of the O-D stretch of a D2O solution. A 10 kHz train of mid-infrared probe pulses was used to monitor spectral changes following the temperature jump. Calibration with trifluoroacetic acid solution showed that a temperature jump of 10 K lasting for tens of microseconds was achieved, sufficient to observe fast processes in functionally relevant biomolecular mechanisms. Modeling of heating profiles across ≤10 µm path length cells and subsequent cooling dynamics are used to describe the initial <100 ns cooling at the window surface and subsequent, >10 µs cooling dynamics of the bulk solution.
Keyphrases
  • high frequency
  • high resolution
  • quantum dots
  • high speed
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  • solid state
  • optical coherence tomography
  • cell proliferation
  • mass spectrometry
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  • cell cycle arrest