We are developing a proximal noncontact detection technique for trace amounts of hazardous materials using diffuse reflectance infrared spectral signatures. Spectroscopy is performed at a distance by tuning a quantum… Click to show full abstract
We are developing a proximal noncontact detection technique for trace amounts of hazardous materials using diffuse reflectance infrared spectral signatures. Spectroscopy is performed at a distance by tuning a quantum cascade laser system through its wavelength range (6-11 μm) as the active illumination source and collecting a portion of the diffusely reflected light from the target onto an MCT focal plane array. The signals from each collected frame are binned and processed into an image hypercube that contains spectral and spatial information. The primary motivation of this work is to protect the loss of life by detecting trace explosives on contaminated surfaces before attacks occur. Here, we present results from backscatter experiments on trace samples with low loading and fill factors on glass substrates and compare them with a conventional benchtop analysis technique, FTIR diffuse reflectance. The backscatter results illustrate the ability to detect explosives at 1 m distance at the nanogram level, which is beyond the capability of the benchtop FTIR diffuse reflectance measurement.We are developing a proximal noncontact detection technique for trace amounts of hazardous materials using diffuse reflectance infrared spectral signatures. Spectroscopy is performed at a distance by tuning a quantum cascade laser system through its wavelength range (6-11 μm) as the active illumination source and collecting a portion of the diffusely reflected light from the target onto an MCT focal plane array. The signals from each collected frame are binned and processed into an image hypercube that contains spectral and spatial information. The primary motivation of this work is to protect the loss of life by detecting trace explosives on contaminated surfaces before attacks occur. Here, we present results from backscatter experiments on trace samples with low loading and fill factors on glass substrates and compare them with a conventional benchtop analysis technique, FTIR diffuse reflectance. The backscatter results illustrate the ability to detect explosives at 1 m distance at the nanogram level, w...
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.