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Design and Development of a Bimodal Optical Instrument for Simultaneous Vibrational Spectroscopy Measurements

International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2022 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Laura A. Arévalo, Stephen A. O’Brien, Andreas Seifert Eneko López, Andreas Seifert Gajendra Singh, Andreas Seifert Andreas Seifert Andreas Seifert

Summary

A novel instrument combining both Raman and FTIR spectroscopy in a single system was designed and built for simultaneous characterization of the same sample. The bimodal system provides complementary molecular information that neither technique can deliver alone. This development could improve the efficiency and accuracy of microplastic identification in environmental and food samples.

Vibrational spectroscopy techniques are widely used in analytical chemistry, physics and biology. The most prominent techniques are Raman and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Combining both techniques delivers complementary information of the test sample. We present the design, construction, and calibration of a novel bimodal spectroscopy system featuring both Raman and infrared measurements simultaneously on the same sample without mutual interference. The optomechanical design provides a modular flexible system for solid and liquid samples and different configurations for Raman. As a novel feature, the Raman module can be operated off-axis for optical sectioning. The calibrated system demonstrates high sensitivity, precision, and resolution for simultaneous operation of both techniques and shows excellent calibration curves with coefficients of determination greater than 0.96. We demonstrate the ability to simultaneously measure Raman and infrared spectra of complex biological material using bovine serum albumin. The performance competes with commercial systems; moreover, it presents the additional advantage of simultaneously operating Raman and infrared techniques. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first demonstration of a combined Raman-infrared system that can analyze the same sample volume and obtain optically sectioned Raman signals. Additionally, quantitative comparison of confocality of backscattering micro-Raman and off-axis Raman was performed for the first time.

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