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Near-Infrared Off-Axis Cavity-Enhanced Optical Frequency Comb Spectroscopy for CO 2 /CO Dual-Gas Detection Assisted by Machine Learning.

Gangyun GuanAnqi LiuXuyang WuChuantao ZhengZhiwei LiuKaiyuan ZhengMingquan PiGuofeng YanJie ZhengYiding WangFrank K Tittel
Published in: ACS sensors (2024)
Cavity-enhanced direct frequency comb spectroscopy (CE-DFCS) is widely used as a highly sensitive gas sensing technology in various gas detection fields. For the on-axis coupling incidence scheme, the detection accuracy and stability are seriously affected by the cavity-mode noise, and therefore, stable operation inevitably requires external electronic mode-locking and sweeping devices, substantially increasing system complexity. To address this issue, we propose off-axis cavity-enhanced optical frequency comb spectroscopy from both theoretical and experimental aspects, which is applied to the detection of single- and dual-gas of carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) in the near-infrared. An erbium-doped fiber frequency comb with a repetition frequency of ∼41.709 MHz is coupled into a resonant cavity with a length of ∼360 mm in an off-axis manner, exciting numerous high-order modes to effectively suppress cavity-mode noise. The performance of multiple machine learning models is compared for the inversion of a single/dual gas concentration. A few absorbance spectra are collected to build a sample data set, which is then utilized for model training and learning. The results demonstrate that the Particle Swarm Optimization Support Vector Machine (PSO-SVM) model achieves the highest predictive accuracy for gas concentration and is ultimately applied to the detection system. Based on Allan deviation, the detection limit for CO in single-gas detection can reach 8.247 parts per million by volume (ppmv) by averaging 87 spectra. Meanwhile, for simultaneous CO 2 /CO measurement with highly overlapping absorbance spectra, the LoD can be reduced to 13.196 and 4.658 ppmv, respectively. The proposed optical gas sensing technique indicates the potential for the development of a field-deployable and intelligent sensor system capable of simultaneous detection of multiple gases.
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