Author :
Papageorgas, Panagiotis G. ; Winter, Harald ; Albrecht, Hansjorg ; Maroulis, Dimitris ; Theofanous, Nikiforos G.
Abstract :
A microcontroller-based photon counting system has been developed by Laser and Medicine-Technology gGmbH, Berlin, Germany, in cooperation with the University of Athens. This microcontroller-based system controls, acquires, processes and stores the data from a high-resolution multichannel gas analyzer based on linear vibrational Raman scattering. The system described provides accurate photon-counting measurements using suitable photomultiplier tubes (PMT´s) as detectors of the Raman signals. The implemented system amplifies, discriminates and counts the PMT pulses with a pulse-pair resolution of 5 ns. The specific implementation offers a number of important features such as portability, low power consumption, low cost, increased reliability, high sensitivity, and upgradability, and supports autocalibration and drift-compensation. Moreover, the described photon-counting system can be easily adapted to a broad field of applications, some of which are in the fields of medical electronics (confocal microscopy) and bio-electronics, air pollution measurements with Raman spectrometers, mass spectrometers, laser sounding of the atmosphere, and electro-optical systems, where photomultiplier tubes are typically used in the pulse-counting mode of operation
Keywords :
Raman spectroscopy; calibration; gas sensors; photomultipliers; photon counting; spectrochemical analysis; Raman spectrometers; air pollution measurements; autocalibration; bio-electronics; drift-compensation; electro-optical systems; gas analysis; laser sounding; linear vibrational Raman scattering; mass spectrometers; medical electronics; microcontroller-based system; multichannel gas analyzer; multichannel photon counting system; photomultiplier tubes; power consumption; pulse-pair resolution; reliability; sensitivity; upgradability; Atmospheric measurements; Gas lasers; Mass spectroscopy; Medical control systems; Photomultipliers; Pollution measurement; Process control; Pulse amplifiers; Pulse measurements; Raman scattering;