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A conceptual prototype of Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory's Quartz Vibrational Resonator Laser
Photo-Acoustic Sensing technology. The prototype includes 10 pairs
of quantum cascade lasers and tuning forks in a box that is 12
inches long, 12 inches wide and 6 inches high. The full case would
weigh less than 15 pounds. The technology can detect gaseous nerve
agent surrogates, at the sub-part-per-billion level, in less than
one minute.
Credit: Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory |
"QPAS is an extremely sensitive and selective
chemical detection technique that can be miniaturized and yet is still
practical to operate in field environments," said Michael Wojcik, a
research scientist at PNNL. "The laser, tuning fork and other
technology needed for QPAS are so simple, and yet robust, that further
development is a low-risk investment, and we're eager to take it to
the next level."
The instrument is based on Laser Photo-Acoustic
Sensing, or LPAS, and infrared Quantum Cascade Lasers, or QCLs. LPAS
is an exquisitely sensitive form of optical absorption spectroscopy,
where a pulsed laser beam creates a brief absorption in a sample gas,
which in turn creates a very small acoustic signal. A miniature quartz
tuning fork acts as a "microphone" to record the resulting sound wave.
PNNL researchers paired multiple QCLs with the
tuning forks, allowing simultaneous examination of a single sample at
many infrared wavelengths. Nearly every molecule has unique optical
properties at infrared wavelengths between three and 12 micrometers,
and QCLs provide access to any wavelength in this region.
"Because of this access and the fact that QPAS is
almost immune to acoustic interference, we have potential for
extraordinary chemical sensitivity and selectivity," Wojcik said.
QPAS's small components represent a major advance
over previous LPAS measurement methods. Historically, LPAS instruments
were physically large, often measuring a meter or more in length. The
entire arrangement was cumbersome, power-hungry and prone to
interference from external sound and vibration.
In the QPAS technique, several QCLs can fit on a 3
x 3 millimeter chip. And the tuning forks are identical to the kind
used in wristwatches, measuring only 4 millimeters long, 2 millimeters
wide and 0.3 millimeter thick. A conceptual design for a
battery-operated, prototype QPAS sensor, which includes 10 pairs of
QCLs and tuning forks, would fit into a briefcase that is 12 inches
long, 12 inches wide and 6 inches high – and the entire thing would
weigh less than 15 pounds. In addition, the instrument can operate
unattended for long periods of time.
QPAS is currently at Technology Readiness Level "five,"
meaning that while the technical components exist and initial testing
is complete, the system still must be converted to a prototype. |