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High sensitivity microwave spectroscopy in a cryogenic buffer gas cell

MPG-Autoren
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Eibenberger,  Sandra
Molecular Physics, Fritz Haber Institute, Max Planck Society;

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1902.05852.pdf
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Author_version_RSI_2019.pdf
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Zitation

Porterfield, J. P., Satterthwaite, L., Eibenberger, S., Patterson, D., & McCarthy, M. C. (2019). High sensitivity microwave spectroscopy in a cryogenic buffer gas cell. Review of Scientific Instruments, 90(5): 053104. doi:10.1063/1.5091773.


Zitierlink: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0003-9614-D
Zusammenfassung
We describe an instrument which can be used to analyze complex chemical mixtures at high resolution and high sensitivity. Molecules are collisionally cooled with helium gas at cryogenic temperatures (∼4–7 K) and subsequently detected using chirped pulse microwave spectroscopy. Here, we demonstrate three significant improvements to the apparatus relative to an earlier version: (1) extension of its operating range by more than a factor of two, from 12–18 GHz to 12–26 GHz, which allows a much wider range of species to be characterized; (2) improved detection sensitivity owing to the use of cryogenically cooled low-noise amplifiers and protection switches; and (3) a versatile method of sample input that enables analysis of solids, liquids, gases, and solutions, without the need for chemical separation (as demonstrated with a 12–16 GHz spectrum of lemon oil). This instrument can record broadband microwave spectra at comparable sensitivity to high Q cavity spectrometers which use pulsed supersonic jets, but up to 3000 times faster with a modest increase in the sample consumption rate.