Publications (3)14.92 Total impact
-
Article: Broadband cavity-enhanced absorption spectroscopy for real time, in situ spectral analysis of microfluidic droplets.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Broadband cavity-enhanced absorption spectroscopy has been used to record, in real time, the absorption spectrum of microlitre volume aqueous phase droplets within a microfluidic chip assembly. Using supercontinuum radiation and broadband coated external mirrors, the full visible spectrum (430 nm < λ < 700 nm) of each passing droplet is acquired in situ at high repetition rates (273 Hz/3.66 ms acquisition time) and high sensitivity (α(min) < 10(-2) cm(-1)). The possibilities for further improvements in sensitivity and acquisition rate using custom designed chips are discussed.Lab on a Chip 12/2011; 11(23):3953-5. · 5.67 Impact Factor -
Article: Top notch design for fiber-loop cavity ring-down spectroscopy.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Fiber-loop cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) is a highly sensitive spectroscopic absorption technique which has shown considerable promise for the analysis of small-volume liquid samples. We have developed a new light coupling method for fiber-loop CRDS, which overcomes two disadvantages of the technique: low efficiency light coupling into the cavity and high loss per pass. The coupler is based on a 45° reflective notch polished between 10 and 30 μm into the core of a large-core-diameter (365 μm) optical fiber, and allows for nearly 100% light coupling into the cavity, with a low loss per pass (<4%). The coupler has the additional advantage that the input and output light is spatially separated on opposite sides of the fiber. The detection sensitivity of a fiber-loop CRD spectrometer employing the new coupling method is established from ring-down measurements on aqueous rhodamine 6G (Rh6G) at 532 nm. The results are compared with data obtained using the same light source and detector, but a conventional bend-coupled small-core-diameter (50 μm) optical fiber loop. With our new coupler, a detection limit of 0.11 cm(-1) is found, which corresponds to detection of 0.93 μM Rh6G in a volume of only 19 nL. This is an improvement of over an order of magnitude on our bend-coupled small-core optical fiber results, in which a detection limit of 5.3 cm(-1) was found, corresponding to a detection of 43 μM Rh6G in a volume of 20 pL.Analytical Chemistry 11/2011; 83(22):8492-500. · 5.86 Impact Factor -
Article: Fabrication of an optical fiber reflective notch coupler.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A method of fabricating a reflective notch coupler in an optical fiber has been developed. The coupler consists of a 45° microprism that penetrates into the core of a multimode optical fiber. One face, at 90° to the fiber axis, is nonreflective, and one face, at 45° to the fiber axis, is reflective. Our method of fabricating a notch and selectively mirroring only the 45° face is low-cost, precise, and easily scalable. The coupler allows near-100% coupling of light into an optical fiber from the side, while allowing coupling of any desired fraction of light out from the core at a 90° angle on the opposite side of the fiber.Optics Letters 08/2011; 36(15):2952-4. · 3.40 Impact Factor
Top Journals
- Lab on a Chip (1)
- Analytical Chemistry (1)
- Optics Letters (1)
Institutions
-
2011
-
University of Oxford
- Department of Chemistry
Oxford, ENG, United Kingdom
-