Spectroscopia Raman
Spectroscopia Raman
Spectroscopia Raman
Energy level diagram showing the states involved in Raman signal. The line thickness is
roughly proportional to the signal strength from the different transitions.
Typically, a sample is illuminated with a laser beam. Light from the illuminated spot is
collected with a lens and sent through a monochromator. Wavelengths close to the laser line,
due to elastic Rayleigh scattering, are filtered out while the rest of the collected light is
dispersed onto a detector.
Spontaneous Raman scattering is typically very weak, and as a result the main difficulty of
Raman spectroscopy is separating the weak inelastically scattered light from the intense
Rayleigh scattered laser light. Historically, Raman spectrometers used holographic gratings
and multiple dispersion stages to achieve a high degree of laser rejection. In the past,
photomultipliers were the detectors of choice for dispersive Raman setups, which resulted in
long acquisition times. However, modern instrumentation almost universally employs notch or
edge filters for laser rejection and spectrographs (either axial transmissive (AT), Czerny-
Turner (CT) monochromator) or FT (Fourier transform spectroscopy based), and CCD
detectors.
There are a number of advanced types of Raman spectroscopy, including surface-enhanced
Raman, tip-enhanced Raman, polarised Raman, stimulated Raman (analogous to stimulated
emission), transmission Raman, spatially-offset Raman, and hyper Raman.
Contents
[hide]
• 1 Basic theory
• 2 History
• 3 Applications
• 4 Microspectroscopy
• 5 Polarized analysis
• 6 Variations
• 7 References
• 8 External links
If the final state of the molecule is more energetic than the initial state, then the emitted photon
will be shifted to a lower frequency in order for the total energy of the system to remain
balanced. This shift in frequency is designated as a Stokes shift. If the final state is less
energetic than the initial state, then the emitted photon will be shifted to a higher frequency,
and this is designated as an anti-Stokes shift. Raman scattering is an example of inelastic
scattering because of the energy transfer between the photons and the molecules during their
interaction.
[edit] History
Although the inelastic scattering of light was predicted by Adolf Smekal in 1923, it was not
until 1928 that it was observed in practice. The Raman effect was named after one of its
discoverers, the Indian scientist Sir C. V. Raman who observed the effect by means of sunlight
(1928, together with K. S. Krishnan and independently by Grigory Landsberg and Leonid
Mandelstam).[1] Raman won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1930 for this discovery
accomplished using sunlight, a narrow band photographic filter to create monochromatic light
and a "crossed" filter to block this monochromatic light. He found that light of changed
frequency passed through the "crossed" filter.
Systematic pioneering theory of the Raman effect was developed by Czechoslovak physicist
George Placzek between 1930 and 1934.[2] The mercury arc became the principal light source,
first with photographic detection and then with spectrophotometric detection. Currently lasers
are used as light sources.
[edit] Applications
Raman spectroscopy is commonly used in chemistry, since vibrational information is specific
to the chemical bonds and symmetry of molecules. It therefore provides a fingerprint by which
the molecule can be identified. For instance, the vibrational frequencies of SiO, Si2O2, and
Si3O3 were identified and assigned on the basis of normal coordinate analyses using infrared
and Raman spectra.[3] The fingerprint region of organic molecules is in the (wavenumber)
range 500-2000 cm−1. Another way that the technique is used is to study changes in chemical
bonding, e.g., when a substrate is added to an enzyme.
Raman gas analyzers have many practical applications. For instance, they are used in medicine
for real-time monitoring of anaesthetic and respiratory gas mixtures during surgery.
In solid state physics, spontaneous Raman spectroscopy is used to, among other things,
characterize materials, measure temperature, and find the crystallographic orientation of a
sample. As with single molecules, a given solid material has characteristic phonon modes that
can help an experimenter identify it. In addition, Raman spectroscopy can be used to observe
other low frequency excitations of the solid, such as plasmons, magnons, and superconducting
gap excitations. The spontaneous Raman signal gives information on the population of a given
phonon mode in the ratio between the Stokes (downshifted) intensity and anti-Stokes
(upshifted) intensity.
Raman scattering by an anisotropic crystal gives information on the crystal orientation. The
polarization of the Raman scattered light with respect to the crystal and the polarization of the
laser light can be used to find the orientation of the crystal, if the crystal structure (specifically,
its point group) is known.
Raman active fibers, such as aramid and carbon, have vibrational modes that show a shift in
Raman frequency with applied stress. Polypropylene fibers also exhibit similar shifts. The
radial breathing mode is a commonly used technique to evaluate the diameter of carbon
nanotubes. In nanotechnology, a Raman microscope can be used to analyze nanowires to
better understand the composition of the structures.
Spatially-offset Raman spectroscopy (SORS), which is less sensitive to surface layers than
conventional Raman, can be used to discover counterfeit drugs without opening their internal
packaging, and for non-invasive monitoring of biological tissue.[4] Raman spectroscopy can be
used to investigate the chemical composition of historical documents such as the Book of
Kells and contribute to knowledge of the social and economic conditions at the time the
documents were produced.[5] This is especially helpful because Raman spectroscopy offers a
non-invasive way to determine the best course of preservation or conservation treatment for
such materials.
Raman spectroscopy is being investigated as a means to detect explosives for airport security.
[6]
[edit] Microspectroscopy
Raman spectroscopy offers several advantages for microscopic analysis. Since it is a scattering
technique, specimens do not need to be fixed or sectioned. Raman spectra can be collected
from a very small volume (< 1 µm in diameter); these spectra allow the identification of
species present in that volume. Water does not generally interfere with Raman spectral
analysis. Thus, Raman spectroscopy is suitable for the microscopic examination of minerals,
materials such as polymers and ceramics, cells and proteins. A Raman microscope begins with
a standard optical microscope, and adds an excitation laser, a monochromator, and a sensitive
detector (such as a charge-coupled device (CCD), or photomultiplier tube (PMT)). FT-Raman
has also been used with microscopes.
In direct imaging, the whole field of view is examined for scattering over a small range of
wavenumbers (Raman shifts). For instance, a wavenumber characteristic for cholesterol could
be used to record the distribution of cholesterol within a cell culture.
Raman microscopy, and in particular confocal microscopy, has very high spatial resolution.
For example, the lateral and depth resolutions were 250 nm and 1.7 µm, respectively, using a
confocal Raman microspectrometer with the 632.8 nm line from a He-Ne laser with a pinhole
of 100 µm diameter. Since the objective lenses of microscopes focus the laser beam to several
micrometres in diameter, the resulting photon flux is much higher than achieved in
conventional Raman setups. This has the added benefit of enhanced fluorescence quenching.
However, the high photon flux can also cause sample degradation, and for this reason some
setups require a thermally conducting substrate (which acts as a heat sink) in order to mitigate
this process.
Raman microscopy for biological and medical specimens generally uses near-infrared (NIR)
lasers (785 nm diodes and 1064 nm Nd:YAG are especially common). This reduces the risk of
damaging the specimen by applying higher energy wavelengths. However, the intensity of
NIR Raman is low (owing to the ω4 dependence of Raman scattering intensity), and most
detectors required very long collection times. Recently, more sensitive detectors have become
available, making the technique better suited to general use. Raman microscopy of inorganic
specimens, such as rocks and ceramics and polymers, can use a broader range of excitation
wavelengths.[7]
The spectral information arising from this analysis gives insight into molecular orientation and
vibrational symmetry. In essence, it allows the user to obtain valuable information relating to
the molecular shape, for example in synthetic chemistry or polymorph analysis. It is often used
to understand macromolecular orientation in crystal lattices, liquid crystals or polymer
samples.[8]
[edit] Variations
Several variations of Raman spectroscopy have been developed. The usual purpose is to
enhance the sensitivity (e.g., surface-enhanced Raman), to improve the spatial resolution
(Raman microscopy), or to acquire very specific information (resonance Raman).