Citation:
D. Masiyano, J. Hodgkinson, S. Schilt and R. P. Tatam, Self-mixing interference effects in tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy, Applied Physics B: Lasers and Optics, Volume 96, Number 4 / September, 2009, pp863-874
Abstract:
We report the effects of self-mixing interference on gas detection using tunable
diode laser spectroscopy. For very weak feedback, the laser diode output
intensity gains a sinusoidal modulation analogous to that caused by low finesse
etalons in the optical path. Our experiments show that self-mixing interference
can arise from both specular reflections (e.g. cell windows) and diffuse
reflections (e.g. Spectralon™ and retroreflective tape), potentially in a wider
range of circumstances than etalon-induced interference. The form and magnitude
of the modulation is shown to agree with theory. We have quantified the effect
of these spurious signals on methane detection using wavelength modulation
spectroscopy and discuss the implications for real gas detector