JOURNAL ARTICLE

Cavity ring-down spectroscopy measurements of single aerosol particle extinction. I. The effect of position of a particle within the laser beam on extinction

T. ButlerJohanna L. MillerAndrew J. Orr‐Ewing

Year: 2007 Journal:   The Journal of Chemical Physics Vol: 126 (17)Pages: 174302-174302   Publisher: American Institute of Physics

Abstract

A continuous wave distributed feedback diode laser operating in the near infrared at wavelengths close to 1650nm has been used to measure the extinction of light by single aerosol particles. The technique of optical feedback cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) was used for measurement of CRDS events at a repetition rate of 1.25kHz. This very high repetition rate enabled multiple measurements of the extinction of light by single aerosol particles for the first time and demonstrated the dependence of light scattering on the position of a particle within the laser beam. A model is proposed to explain quantitatively this phenomenon. The minimum detectable dimensionless extinction coefficient εmin was determined to be 3×10−6. Extinction values obtained for single spherical polymer beads from a monodisperse sample of particles of diameter of 4μm are in near-quantitative agreement with the values calculated by the Mie scattering theory. The deviations from the Mie theory expected for measurement of extinction by CRDS using a continuous wave laser are discussed in the companion paper.

Keywords:
Mie scattering Extinction (optical mineralogy) Optics Laser Particle (ecology) Dimensionless quantity Scattering Wavelength Aerosol Spectroscopy Materials science Light scattering Physics

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Citation History

Topics

Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Spectroscopy
Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Atmospheric Science
Atmospheric aerosols and clouds
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change

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