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Anomalous Humidity Dependence in Photoacoustic Spectroscopy of CO Explained by Kinetic Cooling

Jakob Hayden, Bettina Baumgartner, Bernhard Lendl

2020Applied Sciences29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Water affects the amplitude of photoacoustic signals from many gas phase molecules. In quartz-enhanced photoacoustic (QEPAS) measurements of CO excited at the fundamental vibrational resonance of CO, the photoacoustic signal decreases with increasing humidity, reaches a pronounced minimum at ~0.19%V, and increases with humidity for higher water contents. This peculiar trend is explained by competing endothermal and exothermal pathways of the vibrational relaxation of CO in N2 and H2O. Near-resonant vibrational–vibrational transfer from CO to N2, whose vibrational frequency is 188 cm−1 higher than in CO, consumes thermal energy, yielding a kinetic cooling effect. In contrast, vibrational relaxation via H2O is fast and exothermal, and hence counteracts kinetic cooling, explaining the observed trend. A detailed kinetic model for collisional relaxation of CO in N2 and H2O is presented. Simulations using rate constants obtained from literature were performed and compared to humidity dependent QEPAS experiments at varying pressure. Agreement between the experiments and simulations confirmed the validity of the model. The kinetic model can be used to identify optimized experimental conditions for sensing CO and can be readily adapted to include further collision partners.

Topics & Concepts

Kinetic energyVibrational energy relaxationExcited stateRelaxation (psychology)Photoacoustic spectroscopyMaterials scienceHumiditySpectroscopyChemistryAtomic physicsAnalytical Chemistry (journal)Photoacoustic imaging in biomedicineThermodynamicsOpticsPhysicsSocial psychologyChromatographyQuantum mechanicsPsychologySpectroscopy and Laser ApplicationsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate
Anomalous Humidity Dependence in Photoacoustic Spectroscopy of CO Explained by Kinetic Cooling | Litcius