The present invention relates to a Raman spectroscopy method and an apparatus therefor using a broadband excitation light.
Raman scattering is a phenomenon in which, when a material is irradiated with excitation light having a fixed frequency, scattered light having a wavelength, that is, a frequency, varied due to interaction with a medium. Raman spectroscopy is a method of measuring vibration spectroscopy of a molecule generated from Raman scattering, determining a vibration structure of the molecule, and qualitatively and quantitatively analyzing a material on the basis of the vibration the molecule.
In Raman spectroscopy, a spectrum peak including unique information related to a vibration of a molecule is present, and thus it is possible to analyze molecules contained in a material using the spectrum peak like a fingerprint print. Thus, the Raman spectroscopy has accuracy that is relatively higher than accuracy of a general spectroscopic technique based on absorption or Rayleigh scattering.
The spectrum peak occurs when light incident on a material is scattered while absorbing or emitting as much light energy as natural vibration energy of molecules of the material. The spectrum peak is due to a Raman shift which is an energy difference between the incidence and the scattering of the light. A Raman spectrum peak measured in a wavelength domain has a small width in the wavelength domain, and discriminative power of a molecule is increased at a high resolution and a high signal-to-noise ratio. To this end, a laser is generally used because light having a narrow bandwidth and high power is required for excitation light.
In order to obtain high-resolution Raman spectroscopy, broadband excitation light cannot be used. In order to obtain a stable narrow bandwidth, a narrow band laser or a single frequency laser is generally used. Since a driving device, and a cooling device for controlling a wavelength shift due to a variation in temperature are required, there are disadvantages of being complicated and expensive.
The present invention is directed to providing a method and an apparatus which allows high-resolution Raman spectroscopy to be achieved with a simplified light source and a low cost as compared with the related art.
One aspect of the present invention provides a Raman spectrometer which analyzes Raman light obtained by irradiating a target sample with broadband excitation light, the Raman spectrometer including a arithmetic and logic unit configured to perform a deconvolution operation on a signal which detects Raman spectroscopy having a first resolution and form a Raman light signal having a second resolution that is higher than the first resolution.
Another aspect of the present invention provides a method of processing a Raman spectroscopy signal, the method including irradiating a target sample with broadband excitation light and obtaining Raman spectroscopy having a first resolution, calculating a Raman spectroscopy signal corresponding to the Raman spectroscopy having the first resolution, and deconvoluting a Raman light signal and calculating a signal corresponding to Raman spectroscopy having a second resolution that is higher than the first resolution.
In accordance with the present embodiment, there is provided an advantage in that a Raman light signal having a high resolution can be obtained without using an expensive and complicated narrow band light source.
Since the description of the present invention is merely embodiments for structural or functional description, the scope of the present invention should not be interpreted as being limited by the embodiments described herein. That is, since the embodiments can be variously altered and have various forms, it should be understood that the scope of the present invention includes equivalents capable of implementing technical ideas.
Meanwhile, the meaning of terms used herein should be understood as follows.
It should be understood that the singular forms include plural forms unless the context clearly notes otherwise, and terms such as “comprising,” “having,” and the like are used to specify that a feature, a number, a step, an operation, a component, a part, or a combination thereof described herein is present, and they do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, numbers, steps, operations, components, parts, or combinations thereof.
Each step may be performed differently from the order specified unless a specific order is explicitly stated in the context. That is, each step may be performed in the same order as specified, may be substantially performed simultaneously, or may be performed in the reverse order.
The accompanying drawings referenced to describe the embodiments of the present invention are intentionally exaggerated in size, height, thickness, and the like for convenience of description and for ease of understanding and are not enlarged or reduced in proportion. In addition, certain components illustrated in the drawings may be intentionally reduced and expressed, and other components illustrated therein may be intentionally enlarged and expressed.
Unless otherwise defined, all terms used herein have the same meanings as commonly understood by those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains. General terms that are defined in a dictionary should be construed to have meanings that are consistent in the context of the relevant art and should not be interpreted as having an idealistic or excessively formalistic meaning unless clearly defined in this disclosure.
Hereinafter, a Raman spectrometer and a Raman spectroscopy signal forming method according to the present embodiment will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
As one embodiment, the spectroscopic part 500 includes a diffraction grating 510 for spectralizing the Raman light and a detector 520 for detecting the Raman light which is spectralized by the diffraction grating and outputting an electrical signal corresponding to the detected Raman light.
In the embodiment illustrated in
A bandwidth of a narrowband spectrum used in the Raman spectroscopy according to the related art shown in
The light output from the light source 100 is provided to the target sample TS through the dichroic mirror 300. The dichroic mirror 300 is a mirror having a characteristic of reflecting light having a first wavelength and allowing light having a second wavelength to pass therethrough. The dichroic mirror 300 according to the present embodiment reflects the light output from the light source 100 or from the light passing through the band pass filter 200. The light is reflected from the dichroic mirror 300 and then provided to the target sample TS so that Raman light RL of which a wavelength and a frequency are varied due to interaction with a material of the target sample TS is output.
In one embodiment, the Raman spectrometer may further include a long pass filter (LPF) which removes a short wavelength component of excitation light EL from Raman light RL.
The light output from the target sample TS includes the excitation light EL and the Raman light RL.
As in the embodiment illustrated in
A component of the Raman light RL passing through the second dichroic mirror 310 is supplied to the spectroscopic part 500 and spectralized, a spectral component of the Raman light RL is detected, and an electrical signal corresponding to the spectral component is output. According to an embodiment, the spectroscopic part 500 includes a spectrometer including at least one diffraction grating 510, a slit (not shown) for adjusting a spectral resolution, a light collecting system (not shown) including a lens and a mirror which collect light, and a detector 520 which outputs an electrical signal corresponding to the provided light.
An arithmetic and logic unit (not shown) receives electrical signals output from the detector 520 and the second spectrometer 600 and calculates an algorithm which will be described below.
In the embodiment illustrated in
As in the embodiment illustrated in
In an embodiment which is not illustrated, a long pass filter for selectively allowing the component of the Raman light RL to transmit therethrough may be further included in front of the spectroscopic part 500.
The arithmetic and logic unit (not shown) receives a Raman light signal having a first resolution corresponding to the detected Raman light and performs an arithmetic and logic operation of an algorithm to form a Raman light signal having a second resolution that is higher than the first resolution. For example, the arithmetic and logic unit may be integrally formed with the light source 100, the band pass filter 200, the dichroic mirror 300, and the spectroscopic part 500. Alternatively, the arithmetic and logic unit may be formed separately from the light source 100, the band pass filter 200, the dichroic mirror 300, and the spectroscopic part 500 and may perform an algorithm, which will be described below, in a computing device such as a smart terminal, a laptop, a desktop, and a workstation, or the like.
Hereinafter, a method of forming a Raman spectroscopy signal according to the present embodiment will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The Raman light signal corresponding to the Raman light having the first resolution is formed such that the broadband excitation light is convoluted with a Raman transfer function of the target sample. Thus, the Raman light signal has a low resolution. The arithmetic and logic unit 300 performs a deconvolution operation on the Raman light signal to calculate a signal corresponding to Raman spectroscopy having a second resolution that is higher than the first resolution (S300).
Mathematical expressions with respect to the excitation light EL and the Raman light RL are summarized as follows. The excitation light is divided into a general narrow band excitation light f(λ) and a broadband excitation light g(λ) in a wavelength domain, and Raman lights due to the excitation light are referred to as R(λ) and S(λ).
The Raman light generated due to the narrow band excitation light f(λ) and the Raman light generated due to the broadband excitation light g(λ) may be expressed as the following equation by the Raman transfer function.
R(λ)=Raman Transfer Function[f(λ)]=TS*f(λ)
S(λ)=Raman Transfer Function[g(λ)]=TS*g(λ) [Equation 1]
(*: a convolution operation, and TS: a Raman transfer function of a target sample)
The Raman transfer function which generates Raman light is an intrinsic characteristic which is varied according to a molecule of a material. When a spectrum of the broadband excitation light is divided into m spectra of a narrow band light source, a relational expression between the m spectra is expressed by the following equation.
That is, the broadband excitation light g(λ) may be decomposed into m narrow band components by a delta function. The delta function is defined as the following equation.
f(λ) may be any one among various basis functions or a function in which the various basis functions are linearly or nonlinearly combined. For example, the basis function may include any one among the following functions.
An amplitude f0 of each of the Lorentzian function, the Gaussian function, and the Rectangular function may be varied according to a wavelength and may have a maximum value f0,max and/or a minimum value f0,min at a specific wavelength. A mathematical expression of the Raman light RL, which is formed due to the provision of the excitation light, is expressed as Equation 4 below.
Equation 4 may represent the broadband Raman spectroscopy S(λ) as the sum of Raman spectroscopies R(λ1), R(λ2), R(λ3), . . . , R(λn) due to the narrow band excitation light.
When Raman spectroscopy is not significantly affected by a wavelength of excitation light, Raman spectroscopy R(λk) with respect to excitation light f(λk) having any specific wavelength may be applied to all n values. Alternatively, when excitation lights f(λ1), f(λ2), . . . , f(λn) with respect to wavelengths λm are known, previously measured values may be used as the narrow band Raman spectroscopies R(λ1), R(λ2), R(λ3), . . . , R(λn). In this case, an amplitude of Raman light with respect to each wavelength is determined by an intensity of excitation light intensity at each wavelength.
A deconvolution operation may be performed on the measured Raman light S(λ) to obtain a desired R(λ). The Raman light S(λ) and the Raman spectroscopy R(λ) may be expressed as Equation 1, and, when R(λ) deconvoluted by omitting TS is expressed as S(λ), Equation 5 below is obtained.
The arithmetic and logic unit may numerically analytically calculate Equation 5 to obtain desired narrow band Raman spectroscopy R(λ).
In order to aid in understanding of the present invention, the description has been made with reference to the embodiments shown in the drawings, but these embodiments are for implementation and are merely illustrative. Thus, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications and other equivalent embodiments can be derived without departing from the scope of the present invention. Therefore, the true technical scope of the present invention should be defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2018-0015756 | Feb 2018 | KR | national |
This application is a National Stage Patent Application of PCT International Patent Application No. PCT/KR2019/001562 (filed on Feb. 8, 2019) under 35 U.S.C. § 371, which claims priority to Korean Patent Application No. 10-2018-0015756 (filed on Feb. 8, 2018), which are all hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/KR2019/001562 | 2/8/2019 | WO | 00 |