IRAM Raman 1um beads 2/25/16

single_5dsingle_2dsingle_1dsingle_0single_1usingle_2usingle_5uensemble_5d ensemble_0 ensemble_5u

Raman Spectra of 1um beads taken at 20s exposure times.  Spectra were taken at different axial positions of trapped bead(s?) and a group of beads that were adhered to the cover slip.  These positions ranged from about 5 (microns?) above and below the cover slip (full range is shown for individual beads while select points are shown for the ensemble).  The “glass edge” on the right is dominant in all of the adhered ensemble spectra while it disappears as the focus moved farther into the sample for the trapped bead.

Some sources of uncertainty are: 1)finding a place where a bead could be trapped and wouldn’t get knocked out by other beads coming into the trap or leave on its own (I had to start 5 microns above the coverslip to get a stable trap). 2)I used the back reflection of the glass on the microscope’s ccd as a reference point. When I was finishing measurements, I noticed the position of the back reflection was not where I originally set my “0” point (This is not the first time this has been noticed, but I wanted to make a note of it here) 3)I’m pretty sure that 1 increment on the fine tuning knob (which is what I was using to move the objective) corresponds to 1 micron, but I haven’t been able to 100% verify this. 4)Looking at published spectra, the pixel to wavenumber calibration may be slightly off (peaks are shifted to the right a bit). 5)This spectra was taken after looking for and reducing sources of power loss in the Raman path. Part of the process involved adjusting a filter that cleans up the laser light and that may explain the floor around 200 cm^-1

 

IRAM Raman-Polystyrene Block 02/23

Raman spectra of a plastic block taken at different exposure times ranging from 1 second to 2 minutes (range in images shown is 1 to 30 seconds). Increasing exposure time reduced noise but also increased background.  Spectra was collected with the oil objective and the block in direct contact with the objective, so changing depth was not an option.  I also looked at how the spectra looked using the full CCD (fvb) and a subset corresponding to an individual fiber from the bundle (mt).

fvb1s fvb5s mt1s mt5s mt15s mt30

IRAM Raman-Ethanol

Ethanol @ Interface multtrack_2plotmulttrack_3plot multtrack_4plot multtrack_5plot

These are Raman spectra of ethanol taken using the IRAM system. Images were taken at multiples of 5 microns into the sample, starting from the coverslip/ethanol interface to 25 microns into the sample.   As the focus goes deeper in to the sample, the effects of the coverslip (ex broad peak at the high end) become less prominent.

Exposure time was 10 seconds.  Spectra was taken from a section of the image that was 10 pixels tall, corresponding to light going into a single fiber of the fiber bundle.