Frequently Asked Questions
What is Raman Spectrocopy
Raman Spectroscopy - Similar to an infrared spectrum, a Raman
spectrum consists of a wavelength distribution of bands
corresponding to molecular vibrations specific to the sample being
analyzed. In practice, a laser is focused on the sample, the inelastically scattered radiation (Raman) is optically collected,
and directed into a spectrometer, which provides wavelength
dispersion, and a detector converts photon energy to electrical
signal intensity. Historically, the very low conversion of incident
radiation to inelastic scattered radiation (1 in 109)
limited Raman spectroscopy to applications that were difficult to
perform by infrared spectroscopy, usually aqueous solutions.
Real-time chemical analysis can be performed in a non-contact
manner. The wavelengths and intensities of the scattered light
can be used to identify functional groups of molecules because each
compound has its own unique Raman spectrum which can be used as a
finger print for identification. It has found wide application in
the chemical, polymer, semiconductor, and pharmaceutical industries
because of its high information content.
Why Raman Spectrocopy
- Easy sampling of solids, powders, gels, liquids, slurries,
and aqueous solutions
- No sample preparation
- Sampling through windows, transparent containers, blister
packs, or by immersion
- Remote sampling using fiber optic probes (up to 100 meters)
- Sharp spectral peaks for quantitative and qualitative analysis
Why FT-Raman
- Multiplex advantage (Fellgett advantage) All source
wavelengths are measured simultaneously in an interferometer,
whereas in a dispersive spectrometer they are measured
successively. A complete spectrum can be collected very rapidly
and many scans can be averaged in the time taken for a single
scan of a dispersive spectrometer.
- Throughput advantage (Jacquinot advantage) For the
same resolution, the energy throughput in an interferometer can
be higher than in a dispersive spectrometer, where it is
restricted by the slits. In combination with the Multiplex
Advantage, this leads to one of the most important features of
an FT-Raman spectrometer: the ability to achieve the same
signal-to-noise ratio as a dispersive instrument in a much
shorter time.
- Connes advantage The wavenumber scale of an
interferometer is derived from a HeNe (helium neon) laser that
acts as an internal reference for each scan. The wavenumber of
this laser is known very accurately and is very stable. As a
result, the wavenumber calibration of interferometers is much
more accurate and has much better long term stability than the
calibration of dispersive instruments.
- Negligible stray light Because of the way in which
the interferometer modulates each source wavelength. There is no
direct equivalent of the stray light found in dispersive
spectrometers.
- Constant resolution Resolution is constant at all
wavenumbers in the defined spectral range but the
signal-to-noise ratio varies across the spectrum. FT-Raman
instruments have a much higher optical throughput than
dispersive instruments and do not use slits to define the
resolution. Instead, the resolution is defined by the J-stop (Jacquinot
stop) aperture size, which does not change during data
collection. In dispersive instruments, throughput is typically
optimized by adjusting the slit width during the scan. Thus,
signal-to-noise is constant but resolution varies.
- No discontinuities Because there are no grating or
filter changes, there are no discontinuities in the spectrum.