The photonic energy of terahertz wave is in the same order of magnitude as the rotational and vibrational energy levels of organic and biological macromolecules, so it has unique advantages in detecting cells and biological macromolecules. However, in the life environment, the dynamic time scale of cell-environment interaction and structural conformation change of biological macromolecules are within picosecond to millisecond, and water has strong absorption to terahertz wave, which has become the bottleneck problem for the detection of cells and biological macromolecules by terahertz technology. In this article, we developed a set of terahertz single measurement system based on the tilt wave front of grating pulse technique. The system was employed for the terahertz detection of trace living cervical cancer cells. We achieved transient detection of the terahertz pulse time-domain waveform of the living HeLa cells. The characteristic absorption peaks were identified by Lambert-Beer law, respectively, at 0.49, 0.71, 1.04, 1.07, 1.26 and 1.37 THz. The absorbance is proportional to the cell concentration.
Femtosecond laser filamentation is a unique nonlinear optical phenomenon when high-power ultrafast laser propagation in all transparent optical media. During filamentation in the atmosphere, the ultrastrong field of 1013–1014 W/cm2 with a large distance ranging from meter to kilometers can effectively ionize, break, and excite the molecules and fragments, resulting in characteristic fingerprint emissions, which provide a great opportunity for investigating strong-field molecules interaction in complicated environments, especially remote sensing. Additionally, the ultrastrong intensity inside the filament can damage almost all the detectors and ignite various intricate higher order nonlinear optical effects. These extreme physical conditions and complicated phenomena make the sensing and controlling of filamentation challenging. This paper mainly focuses on recent research advances in sensing with femtosecond laser filamentation, including fundamental physics, sensing and manipulating methods, typical filament-based sensing techniques and application scenarios, opportunities, and challenges toward the filament-based remote sensing under different complicated conditions.
An optimized remote material detection scheme based on the laser filament-induced plasma spectroscopy and light detection and ranging (FIPS-LIDAR) is proposed in this work. The elemental composition and concentration of aerosol are measured by FIPS-LIDAR. By focusing the femtosecond laser with a large aperture (Φ41 cm) concave mirror and coaxial fluorescence collection scheme, the remote detection of aerosol in air at μg/m3 level has been realized at a distance of 30 m. The limit of detection for Na+ in aerosol droplets is 8 ppm (3 μg/m3 in air), which is the lowest detection limit that has been reported using millijoule femtosecond laser pulse (4.4 mJ). Furthermore, using spectral preprocessing and optimization of the proposed significance of peak (SOP) algorithm, feature peak signals are extracted from weak signals and the limit of detection can be further decreased to 1.4 μg/m3.
A current of 1.54 kA was obtained under a bias voltage of only 1.6 kV by employing a single photoconductive semiconductor switch (PCSS) excited by a laser diode (LD) with energy of 4 μJ. In this work, an opposed contact structure PCSS was used instead of a lateral structure one. We show that a avalanche multiplication rate of PCSS as high as 258 has been obtained. The effects of the electric field strength and of the capacitance on the current waveform were investigated. Moreover, the damping degree was calculated in combination with the current waveform. The calculation indicates that the current attenuation degree increases upon the increase of the capacitance for a fixed value of the electric field strength, whereas the current attenuation degree decreases upon the increase of electric field strength for a fixed charging capacitance. The results obtained in this work show that, by employing opposed contact structure PCSSs in combination with a relatively low bias voltage and laser pulse energy, high-current and long pulse power devices based on inexpensive and compact sources can be produced.
In this work, sub-ppb aerosol detection is achieved by femtosecond laser filament with a single pulse energy of 4 mJ at a distance of 30 m. A concave mirror with an open aperture of 41.4 cm is employed in an off-axis optical system to focus the femtosecond laser beam and collect the fluorescence of NaCl aerosol. The simulation and experimental results show that the astigmatism can be greatly reduced when femtosecond laser beam is incident non-symmetrically on the concave mirror. Compared with the case that femtosecond laser strikes at the center of the concave mirror, the intensity of acoustic signal emitted from the optical filament is increased by 69.5 times, and the detection of limit of sodium element in aerosol is reduced by 86%, which is down to 0.32 ppb. The improved excitation scheme in this work utilizes the nonsymmetrical beam spot on the concave mirror to compensate the non-symmetry induced by the off-axis setup, reducing the astigmatism of the focusing laser beam and decreasing the sodium chloride aerosol’s detection of limit.
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