Method and apparatus for performing spectrometric measurements
11624707 · 2023-04-11
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Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
An apparatus adapted to perform spectrometric measurements, said apparatus comprising a tunable laser light source adapted to generate a laser light with an excitation wavelength supplied to an optical sensor which produces a sample specific response light signal; an optical reference filter adapted to measure laser light with the excitation wavelength fed back as a reference signal to provide wavelength calibration of the tunable laser light source; at least one optical measurement filter adapted to measure the sample specific response light signal produced by the optical sensor, wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter are thermally coupled to maintain a constant wavelength relationship between the filter characteristics of the optical filters.
Claims
1. An apparatus adapted to perform spectrometric measurements, said apparatus comprising: a tunable laser light source adapted to generate a laser light with an excitation wavelength supplied to an optical sensor which produces a sample specific response light signal; an optical reference filter adapted to measure laser light with the excitation wavelength fed back as a reference signal to provide wavelength calibration of the tunable laser light source; at least one optical measurement filter adapted to measure the sample specific response light signal produced by the optical sensor; wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter are thermally coupled to maintain a constant wavelength relationship between the respective filter characteristics of the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter, wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter belong to one thermal group, so that they are subject to a same temperature and related drift.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter are thermally coupled to provide a temperature drift self-calibration.
3. The apparatus according to claim 2 further comprising a photo detector adapted to convert the sample specific excited response light signal into an electrical sample specific response signal supplied by the photo detector to a controller of the apparatus adapted to analyze the received electrical sample specific response signal.
4. The apparatus according to claim 3 wherein the controller is further adapted to control a tuning unit provided for tuning the excitation wavelength of the tunable laser light source.
5. The apparatus according to claim 4 wherein the tuning unit comprises a thermal electric cooler attached to the tunable laser light source.
6. The apparatus according to claim 4 wherein if the optical sensor is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal based on reflections, the controller controls the tuning unit to tune the laser light source in predefined wavelength increments.
7. The apparatus according to claim 6 wherein the wavelength increment corresponds to a peak wavelength difference between the peak wavelengths of the optical reference filter and the optical measurement filter or corresponds to a peak wavelength difference between peak wavelengths of two optical measurement filters with neighboring passband frequency bands or corresponds to a peak wavelength difference between the peak wavelengths of the optical reference filter and the peak reflection wavelengths of the reflective measurement filters.
8. The apparatus according to claim 3 further comprising an optical coupling and splitting unit adapted to supply the laser light with the excitation wavelength generated by the tunable laser light source to the optical sensor and to supply the sample specific excited response light signal produced by the optical sensor to the photo detector of said apparatus.
9. The apparatus according to claim 3 further comprising at least one monitoring photo diode adapted to generate a signal used by the controller to perform a power calibration of the tunable laser light source.
10. The apparatus according to claim 3 further comprising a user interface connected to the controller and comprising a display unit adapted to display analytical results calculated by the controller.
11. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the optical sensor is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal with wavelength shifts or based on reflections.
12. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one measurement filter comprise passband filters with a peak wavelength and with a narrow passband frequency band of less than 1 nm.
13. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the optical filters are formed by liquid crystal filters, thin film filters, Mach-Zehnder interferometers, and/or fiber Bragg gratings integrated in the optical sensor.
14. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the optical sensor is adapted to produce a sample specific excited response signal with wavelength shifts comprises a Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy, SERS, sensor, a Tip-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy, TERS, sensor, or an optrode sensor.
15. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the apparatus is integrated in a handheld device.
16. A method for performing spectrometric measurements, said method comprising: supplying a laser light generated by a tunable laser light source with an excitation wavelength to an optical sensor which produces a sample specific response light signal; measuring by an optical reference filter the laser light with the excitation wavelength and feeding it back as a reference signal to provide wavelength calibration of the tunable laser light source; measuring by an optical measurement filter the sample specific response light signal produced by the optical sensor; and coupling thermally the optical reference filter and the measurement filter to maintain a stable wavelength relationship between the respective filter characteristics of the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter, wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter belong to one thermal group, so that they are subject to a same temperature and related drift.
17. A virus detection device comprising apparatus adapted to perform spectrometric measurements, said apparatus comprising: a tunable laser light source adapted to generate a laser light with an excitation wavelength supplied to an optical sensor which produces a sample specific response light signal; an optical reference filter adapted to measure laser light with the excitation wavelength feedback as a reference signal to provide wavelength calibration of the tunable laser light source; at least one optical measurement filter adapted to measure the sample specific response light signal produced by the optical sensor; wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter are thermally coupled to maintain a constant wavelength relationship between the respective filter characteristics of the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter, wherein the optical reference filter and the at least one optical measurement filter belong to one thermal group, so that they are subject to a same temperature and related drift.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES
(1) In the following, possible embodiments of the different aspects of the present invention are described in more detail with reference to the enclosed figures.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(10) As can be seen from the embodiment illustrated in
(11) The photo detector 5 of the apparatus 1 is adapted to convert the sample specific excited response light signal received via the measurement filter 6 into an electrical sample specific response signal supplied by the photo detector 5 to a controller 8 of the apparatus 1. The controller 8 is adapted to analyze the received electrical sample specific response signal to provide analytical results. The controller 8 is further adapted to control a tuning unit 9 provided for tuning the excitation wavelength λ.sub.TX of the tunable laser light source 3. In a possible implementation as illustrated in
(12) The apparatus 1 can further comprise as illustrated in
(13) In the embodiment illustrated in
(14) As illustrated in the block diagram of
(15) The optical filters 6, 7 implemented in the apparatus 1 shown in the block diagram of
(16) The coupling and splitting unit 4 of the apparatus 1 can comprise a directional fused fiber coupler with or without an asymmetric power ratio. The coupling and splitting unit 4 can further be formed by a circulator. In a still further possible implementation, the coupling and splitting unit 4 comprises a wavelength selective fiber coupler. The measurement filters 6 and the reference filter 7 allow relative wavelength calibration. Consequently, the respective spectroscopic techniques do not rely on absolute wavelength knowledge. With the apparatus 1 as illustrated in the embodiment of
(17)
(18) Accordingly, in a possible implementation, the apparatus 1 according to the first aspect of the present invention can be a handheld spectroscopic device to which a wide range of different optical sensors 2 can be coupled investigating different materials of samples. This handheld spectroscopic device or apparatus 1 can also be used for detection of a specific virus such as SARS-CoV-2.
(19) The Raman shift is the energy difference between the incident laser light and the scattered detected light. This energy difference is connected to the energetic properties of the molecular vibrations of the investigated sample and hence independent of the laser light wavelength. The Raman shift can be expressed in wave numbers. The count rate comprises a number of events the photo detector 5 does register for the respective Raman shift per second of detector integration. It can be a proportion to the intensity of the light imaged to the photo detector 5.
(20) The identification performed by the controller 8 using spectroscopy can be carried out by using a comparison algorithm and a spectral database. Analytical results can be output to a user via a display unit of the user interface 12 as shown in the block diagram of
(21) The optical reference filter 7 and the at least one measurement filter 6 are formed in a preferred embodiment by narrow bandpass filters BPFs which are used to pass (transmit) a range of wavelengths and to block (reflect) other wavelengths on either side of the bandpass filter range. The region of high transmittance is known as the passband and the region of high reflectance is known as the reject band or reflect band.
(22) The passband and the reflect bands are separated by the role off region. The complexity of the bandpass filters depends on the steepness of the role off region, the width of the passband and also on the ripple and insertion loss specifications in the passband. Different embodiments and different implementations for the optical filters 6, 7 can be used. The optical filters 6, 7 may comprise liquid crystal filters, thin film filters or Mach-Zehnder interferometers.
(23) The optical sensor 2 of the apparatus 1 is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal with wavelength shifts, e.g. because of Raman scattering. In an alternative embodiment, the optical sensor 2 can also operate based on reflections. In case that the optical sensor 2 is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal based on reflections, the controller 8 controls the tuning unit 9 which tunes the laser light source 3 in predefined wavelength increments. Wavelength increments can correspond to a peak wavelength difference between the peak wavelength of the optical reference filter 7 and the optical measurement filter 6. Further, the wavelength increment can also correspond to a peak wavelength difference between peak wavelengths of two optical measurement filters 6 having neighboring passband frequency bands.
(24) The apparatus 1 can use different kinds of optical sensors 2 adapted to produce a sample specific excited response signal. Besides the Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy, SERS, sensor illustrated in
(25) A group of target spectroscopic techniques does rely on wavelength shifts. This holds e.g. for SERS/TERS sensors and for FOCS and optrodes, which make use of fluorescence effects. Another technique makes use of interferometry. Interferometry is a technique in which waves, usually electromagnetic waves, are superimposed causing the phenomenon of interference which can be used to extract information about investigated material. Spectroscopic techniques which rely on wavelength shifts may use an optical sensor having a sensor area which is coated with an analyte specific coating and is illuminated with a certain excitation wavelength. Wavelength requirements are not high because the analyte specificity results from the coating of the sensor area. It is also possible that several coating areas can be illuminated with different wavelengths so that a rough knowledge of the laser wavelength provided by the reference filter 7 is required.
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(28) In order to detect other characteristic spectral peaks, e.g. to make the analytic detection more unambiguous, the laser light source 3 is tuned incrementally by Δλ.sub.i as shown in
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(30) In case that the sections of the measurement filters 6 produce direct reflections, a specific signal can be detected via related measurement filters 6 integrated in the optical sensor 2. If the passband peak difference between the reference frequency of the optical reference filter 7 and the at least one measurement filter 6 is preset by design and stable against temperature, a specific response signal can be detected without absolute laser wavelength knowledge if the laser light source 3 is referenced to the reference frequency of the optical reference filter 7. Even if the measurement filter 6 requires an absolute wavelength, for the reference filter 7 and the laser light source 3 only a relative wavelength is required.
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(32) The optical reference filter 7 and the at least one optical measurement filters 6 are thermally coupled to maintain a constant wavelength relationship. The thermal expansion coefficient TEC is about 0.5×10.sup.−6° C..sup.−1 and is smaller by a factor of about 20 compared to the thermo-optic coefficient TOC which changes the refractive index n. For optical fibers, TOC is about 10×10.sup.−6° C..sup.−1.
(33) When an optical fiber is (homogeneously) temperature-shifted, the Bragg wavelengths λ.sub.B of the different fiber Bragg gratings are shifted by the same temperature-induced factor which is negligible for reasonable wavelength increments between different fiber Bragg gratings. Otherwise, it can be considered by simple temperature measurement and applying a correction factor for the incremental tuning.
(34) The temperature-induced AWG wavelength shift is:
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(36) For silica, dn/dT is in the range of 7.5×10.sup.−6/° C. and for silicon, α=2.6 ppm/° C., respectively. Further, L is the path length in the array. Accordingly, a silica-on-silicon device hence has a wavelength drift (red shift) of dλ/dT of about 12 pm/° C. (at a wavelength of 1550 nm). The difference between two filter passbands is in the same order of magnitude as for the fiber Bragg gratings FBG.
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(38) In a first step SA, the laser light is generated by the tunable laser light source 3 with an excitation wavelength λ.sub.Tx supplied to an optical sensor 2 which produces a sample specific response light signal.
(39) In a further step SB, the laser light with the excitation wavelength is measured by an optical reference filter 7 and fed back as a reference signal to provide wavelength calibration of the tunable laser light source 3.
(40) In a further step SC, the sample specific response light signal produced by the optical sensor 2 is measured by at least one optical measurement filter 6.
(41) During the measurements in step SB, SC, the optical reference filter 7 and the measurement filter 6 are thermally coupled to maintain a stable wavelength relationship between the filter characteristics of the optical filters 6, 7. This is illustrated as step SD in the simplified flowchart of
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(43) In a further step S1, the tunable laser light source 3 is tuned to the optical reference filter 7 using the feedback signal provided by the reference filter 7. The laser light with the excitation wavelength can be fed back as a reference signal to provide wavelength calibration of the tunable laser light source 3. The tuning can be performed beginning with a maximum wavelength λ.sub.max.
(44) In a further step S2, it is checked whether it is required to tune to the peak frequency of the optical measurement filter 6 to get an analytical result. This depends on whether the optical sensor 2 is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal based on reflections or to produce a sample specific response signal with wavelength shifts such as caused by Raman scattering. In case that the optical sensor 2 is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal with wavelength shifts, no tuning is required as performed in step S3 as shown in
(45) In a further step S5, an analytical result is produced within the bandwidth of the optical measurement filter 6.
(46) In a further step S6, it is checked whether it is necessary to tune to a next spectral event. If this is not the case, the process stops in step S11. Otherwise, the tunable laser light source 3 is tuned by an increment which corresponds to the peak wavelength difference between two peak wavelengths of two optical measurement filters 6 having neighboring passband frequency bands in step S7.
(47) In step S8, it is checked whether to use the measurement signal of measurement filter 6 for analysis. If the optical sensor 2 is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal based on reflections, the process continues with step S9, whereas if the optical sensor 2 is adapted to produce a sample specific response signal with wavelength shifts, the process continues with step S10. In step S9, the results produced within the bandwidth of the next measurement filter 6 are analyzed. Accordingly, the process loop including steps S6, S7, S8, S9 is adapted to interrogate further spectral events based on reflection.
(48) In contrast, in step S10, results produced within the bandwidth of the measurement filter 6 are analyzed. Consequently, the process loop comprising steps S6, S7, S8, S10 analyzes spectral events wherein a sample specific response signal is produced with wavelength shifts caused e.g. by Raman scattering.
(49) As can be seen from the flowchart in
(50) The method and apparatus 1 according to the present invention can use fiber optical sensors 2 which detect a single or very few specific spectral peaks only. The apparatus 1 according to the present invention does not comprise a broadband flexible spectrometer but uses a single or a very few narrow band optical filters 6, 7 instead. This is combined with a certain limited excitation laser tunability sufficient to cover a few specific spectral peaks for being able to detect and discriminate for instance two different substances. Because of few components required for the hardware equipment of the apparatus 1 according to the present invention, this allows for cheap mass production of the apparatus 1. In a possible use case, the apparatus 1 can comprise a handheld device used for detection of a specific virus such as SARS-CoV-2 detection. Accordingly, in a possible implementation, the apparatus 1 can be implemented as a handheld spectroscopic virus scanning device which can be used in the field. The handheld spectroscopic apparatus 1 can comprise a connector 13 which allows to replace the used optical sensor 2.