Novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling

We report results for the development of a flow-through integrated cavity absorption meter (ICAM.) Absorption measurements have been made with 2% or less change in the signal in the presence of up to 10 m-1 of scattering in the medium. The operating range of the ICAM ranges from 0.004 m-1 to over 40...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Musser, Joseph Alan
Other Authors: Fry, Edward S.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4736
id ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-4736
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-47362013-01-08T10:38:34ZNovel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity couplingMusser, Joseph AlanabsorptionscatteringwaterdiffusereflectorinstrumentationWe report results for the development of a flow-through integrated cavity absorption meter (ICAM.) Absorption measurements have been made with 2% or less change in the signal in the presence of up to 10 m-1 of scattering in the medium. The operating range of the ICAM ranges from 0.004 m-1 to over 40 m-1 of absorption. This range allows one to use a single instrument to measure the absorption from sediment laden rivers out to the cleanest of ocean waters. Further, the ICAM signal has been shown to be independent of the flow rate and turbulence in the medium. In addition we report the development of a diffuse reflector which, to our best knowledge, has the highest measured diffuse reflectivity of 0.998 at 532 nm and 0.996 at 266 nm. We also show that the average distance a photon travels between successive reflections in an integrating cavity of arbitrary shape is four times the volume divided by the surface area, 4 V/S. Further, for a cavity which is formed by planes tangent to an inscribed sphere and which maintains a homogeneous and isotropic field, the average distance traveled by a photon between successive reflections is equal to 4 V/S of the inscribed sphere. Thus, each cavity has the same ratio of V/S as the inscribed sphere. These advances lead to an increase in the sensitivity of absorption spectroscopy. The sensitivity approaches that of cavity ring down spectroscopy (CARS), without the adverse scattering effects traditionally associated with CARS.Texas A&M UniversityFry, Edward S.2007-04-25T20:05:17Z2007-04-25T20:05:17Z2006-122007-04-25T20:05:17ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext2295368 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4736en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic absorption
scattering
water
diffuse
reflector
instrumentation
spellingShingle absorption
scattering
water
diffuse
reflector
instrumentation
Musser, Joseph Alan
Novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling
description We report results for the development of a flow-through integrated cavity absorption meter (ICAM.) Absorption measurements have been made with 2% or less change in the signal in the presence of up to 10 m-1 of scattering in the medium. The operating range of the ICAM ranges from 0.004 m-1 to over 40 m-1 of absorption. This range allows one to use a single instrument to measure the absorption from sediment laden rivers out to the cleanest of ocean waters. Further, the ICAM signal has been shown to be independent of the flow rate and turbulence in the medium. In addition we report the development of a diffuse reflector which, to our best knowledge, has the highest measured diffuse reflectivity of 0.998 at 532 nm and 0.996 at 266 nm. We also show that the average distance a photon travels between successive reflections in an integrating cavity of arbitrary shape is four times the volume divided by the surface area, 4 V/S. Further, for a cavity which is formed by planes tangent to an inscribed sphere and which maintains a homogeneous and isotropic field, the average distance traveled by a photon between successive reflections is equal to 4 V/S of the inscribed sphere. Thus, each cavity has the same ratio of V/S as the inscribed sphere. These advances lead to an increase in the sensitivity of absorption spectroscopy. The sensitivity approaches that of cavity ring down spectroscopy (CARS), without the adverse scattering effects traditionally associated with CARS.
author2 Fry, Edward S.
author_facet Fry, Edward S.
Musser, Joseph Alan
author Musser, Joseph Alan
author_sort Musser, Joseph Alan
title Novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling
title_short Novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling
title_full Novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling
title_fullStr Novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling
title_full_unstemmed Novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling
title_sort novel instrumentation for a scattering independent measurement of the absorption coefficient of natural waters, and a new diffuse reflector for spectroscopic instrumentation and close cavity coupling
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4736
work_keys_str_mv AT musserjosephalan novelinstrumentationforascatteringindependentmeasurementoftheabsorptioncoefficientofnaturalwatersandanewdiffusereflectorforspectroscopicinstrumentationandclosecavitycoupling
_version_ 1716503538139398144