4.6 Article

Quantitative Tradeoffs Between Spatial, Temporal, and Thermometric Resolution of Nonresonant Raman Thermometry for Dynamic Experiments

Journal

APPLIED SPECTROSCOPY
Volume 68, Issue 11, Pages 1279-1288

Publisher

SOC APPLIED SPECTROSCOPY
DOI: 10.1366/14-07503

Keywords

Raman; Thermometry; Dynamic; Single shot; Stokes to anti-Stokes ratio

Funding

  1. US DOE through the LANL LDRD program
  2. Campaign 2 High Explosive Science program

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The ratio of Stokes to anti-Stokes nonresonant spontaneous Raman can provide an in situ thermometer that is noncontact, independent of any material specific parameters or calibrations, can be multiplexed spatially with line imaging, and can be time resolved for dynamic measurements. However, spontaneous Raman cross sections are very small, and thermometric measurements are often limited by the amount of laser energy that can be applied without damaging the sample or changing its temperature appreciably. In this paper, we quantitatively detail the tradeoff space between spatial, temporal, and thermometric accuracy measurable with spontaneous Raman. Theoretical estimates are pinned to experimental measurements to form realistic expectations of the resolution tradeoffs appropriate to various experiments. We consider the effects of signal to noise, collection efficiency, laser heating, pulsed laser ablation, and blackbody emission as limiting factors, provide formulae to help choose optimal conditions and provide estimates relevant to planning experiments along with concrete examples for single-shot measurements.

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