BoxCARS and pump-probe geometries are common implementations of two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy. BoxCARS is background-free, generally offering greater signal-to-noise ratio, which enables measuring weak vibrational echo signals. Pulse shapers have been implemented in the pump-probe geometry to accelerate data collection and suppress scatter and other unwanted signals by precise control of the pump-pulse delay and carrier phase. Here, we introduce a 2D-IR optical setup in the BoxCARS geometry that implements a pulse shaper for rapid acquisition of background-free 2D IR spectra. We show a signal-to-noise improvement using this new fast-scan BoxCARS setup versus the pump-probe geometry within the same configuration.
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Scattering Elimination in 2D IR Immune from Detector Artifacts
Highly scattering samples, such as polymer droplets or solid-state powders, are difficult to study via coherent two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy. Previously, researchers have employed (quasi-) phase cycling, local-oscillator chopping, and polarization control to reduce scattering, but the latter method poses a limit on polarization-dependent measurements. Here we present a method for Scattering Elimination Immune from Detector Artifacts (SEIFDA) in pump-probe 2D IR experiments. Our method extends the negative probe delay method of removing scattering from pump-probe spectroscopy to 2D experiments. SEIFDA works well for all polarizations when combined with the optimized noise reduction scheme to remove additive and multiplicative noise. We demonstrate that our method can be employed with any polarization scheme and reliably lowers the scattering at parallel polarization to comparable levels to the conventional 8-frame phase cycling with probe chopping (8FPCPC) at perpendicular polarization. Our system can acquire artifact free spectra in parallel polarization when the signal intensity is as little as 5% of the intensity of the interference between the pump pulses scattered into the detector. It reduces the time required to characterize the scattering term by at least 50% over 8FPCPC. Through detailed analysis of detector nonlinearity, we show that the performance of 8FPCPC can be improved by incorporating nonlinear correction factors, but it is still worse than that of SEIFDA. Application of SEIFDA to study the encapsulation of Nile red in polymer droplets demonstrates that this method will be very useful for probing highly scattering systems.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1905395
- PAR ID:
- 10579527
- Publisher / Repository:
- The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
- Volume:
- 128
- Issue:
- 36
- ISSN:
- 1520-6106
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 8835 to 8845
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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