UCLA researchers in the Department of Electrical Engineering have developed an apparatus and method for multiple-pulse impulsive stimulated Raman spectroscopy for molecule structure-level characterization.
Vibrational spectrum derived from a biological sample acquired in a non-pharmaceutical and low-invasive manner is used in biological diagnosis, such as discrimination between healthy tissue and cancerous tissue. Comparing with vibrational spectrum obtained in the fingerprint region, terahertz vibrational spectrum is expected to provide information specific to a molecular structure and structural change in function expression under physiological conditions. However, no existing terahertz detection method can deliver this potential due to superimposition of different molecular modes, mode denseness and damping.
UCLA researchers proposed a new system design based on impulsive stimulated Raman scattering (ISRS) spectroscopy using near infrared light. By controlling the repetition rate of the optical pulse train and the excitation phase of the stimulated Raman scattering, this system is capable of extracting from a Raman spectrum both the vibrational frequency information and vibrational phase relaxation time information of the molecules in a biological sample. From these two types of information, the band information reflecting the structure of the molecule can be obtained although the Raman spectrum is structureless.
The UCLA researchers have proposed a spectroscopic measurement apparatus including pump optical pulse train generation, means to irradiate a single location in an object, probe light to gather vibrational coherence information, and spectrum acquisition means. In addition, other features have been proposed including memorizing Raman spectra and vibrational information from different molecules in an object, chemometric analysis of the obtained Raman spectra, spectrum comparison to desired target molecules, as well as fine frequency selection by setting the repetition rate of the pump optical pulse train.
Country | Type | Number | Dated | Case |
Japan | Issued Patent | 5643329 | 11/07/2014 | 2010-116 |
United States Of America | Issued Patent | 8,456,629 | 06/04/2013 | 2010-116 |
Terahertz, Raman spectroscopy, molecule, light-molecule interaction, impulsive stimulated Raman scattering, impulsive stimulated Raman spectroscopy, ISRS, diagnosis, vibrational spectrum, near infrared light