Broadband Impulsive Stimulated Raman Scattering Based on a Chirped Detection.
Giovanni BatignaniCarino FerranteGiuseppe FumeroTullio ScopignoPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2019)
In impulsive stimulated Raman scattering, vibrational oscillations, coherently stimulated by a femtosecond Raman pulse, are monitored in real time and read out as intensity modulations in the transmission of a temporally delayed probe pulse. Critically, in order to retrieve broadband Raman spectra, a fine sampling of the time delays between the Raman and probe pulses is required, making conventional ISRS ineffective for probing irreversible phenomena and/or weak scatterers typically demanding long acquisition times, with signal-to-noise ratios that crucially depend on the pulse fluences and overlap stabilities. To overcome such limitations, here we introduce the chirped-based impulsive stimulated raman scattering (CISRS) technique. Specifically, we show how introducing a chirp in the probe pulse can be exploited for recording the Raman information without the need to scan over the Raman-probe pulse delay. We then experimentally demonstrate with a few examples how to use the introduced scheme to measure Raman spectra.