The third way of improving the sensitivity of LAS is to increase the path length. This can be obtained by placing the species inside a cavity in which the light bounces back and forth many times, whereby the interaction length can be increased considerably. This has led to a group of techniques denoted as cavity enhanced AS (CEAS). The cavity can either be placed inside the laser, giving rise to intracavity AS, or outside, when it is referred to as an external cavity. Although the former technique can provide a high sensitivity, its practical applicability is limited by non-linear processes. External cavities can either be of
multi-pass type, i.e.
Herriott or
White cells, or be of resonant type, most often working as a
Fabry–Pérot (FP) etalon. Whereas the multi-pass cells typically can provide an enhanced interaction length of up to ~2 orders of magnitude, the resonant cavities can provide a much larger path length enhancement, in the order of the finesse of the cavity,
F, which for a balanced cavity with high reflecting mirrors with reflectivities of ~99.99–99.999% can be ~104 to 105. A problem with resonant cavities is that a high finesse cavity has narrow
cavity modes, often in the low
kHz range. Since cw lasers often have free-running line-widths in the MHz range, and pulsed even larger, it is difficult to couple laser light effectively into a high finesse cavity. However, there are a few ways this can be achieved. One such method is
Vernier Spectroscopy, which employs a frequency comb laser to excite many cavity modes simultaneously and allows for a highly parallel measurement of
trace gases.
Cavity ring-down spectroscopy In
cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) the mode-matching condition is circumvented by injecting a short light pulse in the cavity. The absorbance is assessed by comparing the cavity decay times of the pulse as it "leaks out" of the cavity on and off-resonance, respectively. While independent of laser amplitude noise, this technique is often limited by drifts in the system between two consecutive measurements and a low transmission through the cavity. Despite this, sensitivities in the ~10−7 range can routinely be obtained (although the most complex setups can reach below this~10−9). CRDS has therefore started to become a standard technique for sensitive trace gas analysis under a variety of conditions. In addition, CRDS is now an effective method for different physical parameters (such as temperature, pressure, strain) sensing.
Integrated cavity output spectroscopy Integrated cavity output spectroscopy (ICOS) sometimes called as cavity-enhanced absorption spectroscopy (CEAS) records the integrated intensity behind one of the cavity mirrors, while the laser is repeatedly swept across one or several cavity modes. However, for high finesse cavities the ratio of "on" and "off" a cavity mode is small, given by the inverse of the finesse, whereby the transmission as well as the integrated absorption becomes small. Off-axis ICOS (OA-ICOS) improves on this by coupling the laser light into the cavity from an angle with respect to the main axis so as to not interact with a high density of transverse modes. Although intensity fluctuations are lower than direct on-axis ICOS, the technique is, however, still limited by a low transmission and intensity fluctuations due to partly excitation of high order transverse modes, and can again typically reach sensitivities ~10−7 .
Continuous wave cavity enhanced absorption spectrometry The group of CEAS techniques that has the largest potential to improve is that based on a continuous coupling of laser light into the cavity. This requires however an active locking of the laser to one of the cavity modes. There are two ways in which this can be done, either by optical or electronic
feedback. Optical feedback (OF) locking, originally developed by Romanini et al. for cw-CRDS, uses the optical feedback from the cavity to lock the laser to the cavity while the laser is slowly scanned across the profile (OF-CEAS). In this case, the cavity needs to have a V-shape in order to avoid OF from the incoupling mirror. OF-CEAS is capable of reaching sensitivities ~10−8 range, limited by a fluctuating feedback efficiency. Electronic locking is usually realized with the
Pound-Drever-Hall (PDH) technique, and is nowadays a well established technique, although it can be difficult to achieve for some types of lasers. It has been shown by that also electronically locked CEAS can be used for sensitive AS on overtone lines.
Noise-immune cavity-enhanced optical-heterodyne molecular spectroscopy However, all attempts to directly combine CEAS with a locking approach (DCEAS) have one thing in common; they do not manage to use the full power of the cavity, i.e. to reach limits of detection (LODs) close to the (multi-pass) shot-noise level, which is roughly 2
F/π times below that of DAS and can be down to ~10−13. The reason is twofold: (i) any remaining frequency noise of the laser relative to the cavity mode will, due to the narrow cavity mode, be directly converted to amplitude noise in the transmitted light, thereby impairing the sensitivity; and (ii) none of these techniques makes use of any modulation technique, wherefore they still suffer from the 1/f noise in the system. There is, however, one technique that so far has succeeded in making full use of the cavity by combining locked CEAS with FMS so as to circumvent both of these problems:
Noise-immune cavity-enhanced optical heterodyne molecular spectroscopy (
NICE-OHMS). The first and so far ultimate realization of this technique, performed for frequency standard applications, reached an astonishing LODs of 5•10−13 (1•10−14 cm−1). It is clear that this technique, correctly developed, has a larger potential than any other technique for trace gas analysis. ==References==