Department of Physics, Tel: +44 (0) 1509 22 8409

Raman Microscopy

 
  1. What is it?
  2. Instrument Usage and Features
  3. Applications
  4. Further Information

1. What is it?

When light passes through a material, some of it is absorbed and some of it is scattered. Nearly all of the scattered light has identically the same frequency as the incident light; this is called elastic scattering or Rayleigh scattering. However, a tiny fraction of the scattered light is shifted in frequency; this process is called Raman scattering and the associated frequency shift is called the Raman shift. Raman scattering is caused by the light interacting with some kind of oscillation inside the material, and the Raman shift measures the frequency of the oscillation involved. Many kinds of oscillations produce Raman shifts, e.g. molecular vibrations and rotations, lattice vibrations etc.; a complex structure like an organic compound can oscillate in many ways and can therefore produce a complicated Raman spectrum.

Raman lab

2. Instrument Usage and Features

The Science Faculty possesses a Jobin-Yvon LabRam HR , which is located in the Department of Physics. Samples are placed under the instrument's microscope and illuminated by a focussed laser beam. Back-scattered light is collected and analysed by a diffraction grating and CCD. A useful spectrum from a single spot on the sample may be produced in seconds. The automated scanning stage and temperature controller permit fine scanning in 3 spatial coordinates and temperature.

  • Wavelengths: 633nm (red), 514nm (green) and 488nm (blue)
  • Raman shifts: 100cm-1 up to 3000cm-1 and more.
  • Resolution down to 0.35cm-1 (for the 1800mm-1 grating and red light).
  • Scannable temperature range: -200°C to 600°C
  • Automated XYZ mapping stage (0.1µm steps in X and Y)

3. Applications

Broadly, applications fall into three categories:
  • Analysis/mapping of chemical composition and contamination
  • Analysis/mapping of strain
  • Investigations of excitations in new materials and films
The following links to application notes on the Jobin-Yvon website provide some indication of the sort of studies that can be undertaken:

4. Further Information

The primary purpose of the machine is to serve the needs of the research workers in the Science Faculty, but providing specialist services to industry is also important, and for this purpose the Raman service is affiliated to the Loughborough Materials Characterisation Centre.  For further information contact:

Contact:  Dr Olga Kusmartseva
Email:   o.e.kusmartseva@lboro.ac.uk
 

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