Stimulated Raman spectroscopy, also referred to as stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) is a form of
spectroscopy
Spectroscopy is the field of study that measures and interprets the electromagnetic spectra that result from the interaction between electromagnetic radiation and matter as a function of the wavelength or frequency of the radiation. Matter ...
employed in physics, chemistry, biology, and other fields. The basic mechanism resembles that of
spontaneous Raman spectroscopy: a pump photon, of the angular frequency
, which is scattered by a molecule has some small probability of inducing some vibrational (or rotational) transition, as opposed to inducing a simple Rayleigh transition. This makes the molecule emit a photon at a shifted frequency. However, SRS, as opposed to spontaneous Raman spectroscopy, is a third-order
non-linear
In mathematics and science, a nonlinear system is a system in which the change of the output is not proportional to the change of the input. Nonlinear problems are of interest to engineers, biologists, physicists, mathematicians, and many other ...
phenomenon involving a second photon—the Stokes photon of angular frequency
—which stimulates a specific transition. When the difference in frequency between both photons (
) resembles that of a specific vibrational (or rotational) transition (
) the occurrence of this transition is resonantly enhanced. In SRS, the signal is equivalent to changes in the intensity of the pump and Stokes beams. The signals are typically rather low, of the order of a part in 10^5, thus calling for modulation-transfer techniques: one beam is modulated in amplitude and the signal is detected on the other beam via a
lock-in amplifier
A lock-in amplifier is a type of amplifier that can extract a signal with a known carrier wave from an extremely noisy environment. Depending on the dynamic reserve of the instrument, signals up to a million times smaller than noise components, p ...
. Employing a pump laser beam of a constant frequency and a Stokes laser beam of a scanned frequency (or vice versa) allows for the unraveling of the spectral fingerprint of the molecule. This spectral fingerprint differs from those obtained by other spectroscopy methods such as Rayleigh scattering as the Raman transitions confer to different exclusion rules than those that apply for Rayleigh transitions.
History
The phenomenon of SRS was discovered by an accident by Woodbury and Ng in 1962.
In their experiment, they introduced a Kerr cell containing
nitrobenzene
Nitrobenzene is an organic compound with the chemical formula C6H5 NO2. It is a water-insoluble pale yellow oil with an almond-like odor. It freezes to give greenish-yellow crystals. It is produced on a large scale from benzene as a precursor ...
into a
ruby laser
A ruby laser is a solid-state laser that uses a synthetic ruby crystal as its gain medium. The first working laser was a ruby laser made by Theodore H. "Ted" Maiman at Hughes Research Laboratories on May 16, 1960.
Ruby lasers produce pulses of ...
cavity to study Q-switching processes. This resulted with a strong emission at a wavelength in the IR region that could not be associated with the characteristic wavelengths of the ruby gain medium. At first, this was explained as
luminescence
Luminescence is spontaneous emission of light by a substance not resulting from heat; or "cold light".
It is thus a form of cold-body radiation. It can be caused by chemical reactions, electrical energy, subatomic motions or stress on a crysta ...
. Only at a later stage was this interpreted correctly as the first experimental observation of SRS. A year later, Garmier et al.
introduced a two-wave mixing framework for the description of SRS. These pioneering works opened a new avenue of research and were followed by many theoretical and experimental works in the field of SRS.
Principle
Qualitative description
The principle of SRS can be intuitively understood by adopting the quantum mechanical description of the molecule's energy levels. Initially, the molecule lies in the ground state, that is, its lowest electronic energy level. Then, it simultaneously absorbs both pump and Stokes photons, which causes a vibrational (or rotational) transition with some probability. The transition can be thought of as a two-step transition where in the first step the molecule is excited by the pump photon to a
virtual state and in the second it is relaxed into a vibrational (or rotational) state other than the ground state. The virtual state, which is actually a superposition of probability tails of real states, cannot be occupied by the molecule. However, for a simultaneous absorption of two photons, it might provide a coupling route between the initial and final states. When the energy difference between both pump and Stokes photons matches the energy difference between some vibrational (or rotational) state and the ground state, the probability for a transition due to this stimulated process is enhanced by orders of magnitude.
Quantitative description
Each photon that undergoes SRS is shifted in color from pump to Stokes color. Thus, the SRS signal is proportional to the decrease or increase in the pump or Stokes beams intensities, respectively. These changes in the beams intensities are described by the following rate equations
:
:
where,
and
are the pump and Stokes beams intensities, respectively,
and
are the pump and Stokes angular frequencies, respectively,
is the coordinate along which the beams propagate,
is the Raman gain coefficient, and
is the loss coefficient. The loss coefficient is an effective coefficient that might account for loses due to a variety of processes such as
Rayleigh scattering
Rayleigh scattering ( ), named after the 19th-century British physicist Lord Rayleigh (John William Strutt), is the predominantly elastic scattering of light or other electromagnetic radiation by particles much smaller than the wavelength of the ...
,
absorption
Absorption may refer to:
Chemistry and biology
*Absorption (biology), digestion
**Absorption (small intestine)
*Absorption (chemistry), diffusion of particles of gas or liquid into liquid or solid materials
* Absorption (skin), a route by which ...
, etc. The first rate equation describes the change in Stokes beam intensity along the SRS interaction length. The first term on the right-hand side is equivalent to the amount of intensity gained by the Stokes beam due to SRS. As SRS involves both beams, this term is dependent both on
and
. The second term is equivalent to the amount of intensity lost and is thus dependent only on
. The second rate equation describes the change in pump beam intensity, its form is quite similar to the former. The first term on the right hand side of the second equation equals its counterpart from the first equation up to a multiplicative factor of
. This factor reflects the fact that each photon (as opposed to intensity units) lost from the pump beam due to SRS is gained by the Stokes beam.
In most cases, the experimental conditions support two simplifying assumptions: (1) photon loss along the Raman interaction length,
, is negligible. Mathematically this corresponds to
:
and (2) the change in beam intensity is linear; mathematically this corresponds to
:
.
Accordingly, the SRS signal, that is, the intensity changes in pump and Stokes beams is approximated by
:
:
where
and
are the initial pump and Stokes beams intensities, respectively. As for the Raman interaction length, in many cases this length can be evaluated in a similar fashion to the evaluation of the
Rayleigh length
In optics and especially laser science, the Rayleigh length or Rayleigh range, z_\mathrm, is the distance along the propagation direction of a beam from the waist to the place where the area of the cross section is doubled. A related parameter ...
as
:
.
Here,
and
are the averaged
refractive index
In optics, the refractive index (or refraction index) of an optical medium is a dimensionless number that gives the indication of the light bending ability of that medium.
The refractive index determines how much the path of light is bent, o ...
and
beam waist
In optics, a Gaussian beam is a beam of electromagnetic radiation with high monochromaticity whose amplitude envelope in the transverse plane is given by a Gaussian function; this also implies a Gaussian intensity (irradiance) profile. This ...
, respectively, and
and
are the pump and Stokes wavelengths, respectively.
Every molecule has some characteristic Raman shifts, each associated with a specific vibrational (or rotational) transition of the molecule. The relation between a Raman shift,
, and the pump and Stokes photon wavelengths is given by
:
When the difference in wavelengths between both lasers is close to some Raman transition, the Raman gain coefficient
receives values on the order of