DETECTORS Important characteristics: 1) Wavelength response 2) Quantum response how light is detected 3) Sensitivity 4) Frequency of response

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DETECTORS Important characteristics: 1) Wavelength response 2) Quantum response how light is detected 3) Sensitivity 4) Frequency of response (response time) 5) Stability 6) Cost 7) convenience

Photoelectric detectors main detectors in visible and UV Based on the photoelectric effect photon E electron = hν -w impinging radiation energy e - electron energy of electron work function of surface, lower w easier to eject electron

Phototube or photodiode Composition of photocathode photocathode determines w which in turn determines λ response measures current 90-100 volts applied to draw electrons to anode producing a current on the order of picoamps photons electrons current Usually need current to voltage converter to display signal as voltage proportional to # of photons

Primitive Phototube

Photomultiplier Tube or multiplier phototube (PMT) essentially a phototube with built in amplifier 90 100 volts between photocathode & 1 st dynode & between each successive dynode 1 photon bunch of electrons Each dynode increases the number of electrons Typically 10-20 dynodes

Photomultiplier Tubes (PMTs) Standard PMT Normal device for UV-vis absorption End-On PMT Typically used where required by space or geometry constraints

Characteristic Parameters of PMTs: (typically specified by manufacturers) a) Quantum efficiency = f(λ) photoelectrons ejected = ------------------------------------------ photons striking photocathode b) Cathode sensitivity = µa/lumen or µa/watt have to specify λ and use a standard source at known temperature c) Gain = f (g δ) n number of Typical gain 10 6 collector efficiency transfer efficiency dynode to dynode dynodes electrons/photon in g δ = 4.5 # of electrons emitted -------------------------------- electron striking dynode

d) Spectral response depends on photocathode work function (sensitivity as a function of wavelength) *Very Important*- must be corrected for when scanning e.g. in fluorescence spectrum e) Dark current current when photomultiplier is operated in complete darkness. Lower limit to the current that can be measured dark current needs to be minimized if low intensities are to be measured

Thermionic emission is an important source of dark current this thermal dark current is temperature dependent Therefore, cooling the photomultiplier tube reduces dark current (-40 o C is sufficient to eliminate the thermal component of dark current for most photocathodes Smaller w higher dark current (smaller w s are associated with photocathodes that respond at longer λ s i.e. red sensitive cathodes) low energy photons

If photocathode is exposed to bright daylight without power, it traps energy and it takes 24 48 hrs in the dark with high voltage on in order for dark current to go back to equilibrium value Long term exposures to bright light leads to sensitivity loss particularly at longer λ Noise due to random fluctuations in: 1) Electron current (shot noise) 2) Thermal motion of conducting electrons in the load resistor (Johnson noise) 3) Incident photon flux (quantum noise) flux of photons varies statistically

Shot noise signal current i noise = (2 e i f) ½ bandwidth of detection system noise current charge on electron Shot noise is proportional to the square root of the signal Except at very low currents, shot noise predominates

Advantages of PMTs 1) Stable except after exposure to high light levels 2) Sensitive 3) Linear over several orders of magnitude 4) Reasonable cost 1) Simple PMT for visible region = $100 2) Quartz jacketed PMT for UV & red sensitive tubes for near IR can be more expensive 5) Long lifetime 6) Rapid response (on the order of nanoseconds) IR detectors not nearly as good as PMTs

Normally measure DC level of current resulting from all electrons generated in PMT. However, at low light levels it is possible to do photon counting Each photon gives rise to a pulse of electrons Signal pulses from photons striking PMT Intensity Time (µsec scale) Discriminator setting Dark current pulse not counted

Block Diagram of Photon Counting System PMT Amplifier Discriminator Counter Discriminator sets the level for counting. Pulses exceeding the discriminator level are counted. Pulses below the discriminator level are not counted.

Dead Time after each pulse, electronics need some time to recover = dead time. Any pulse arriving during the dead time interval will not be counted (typically 0.1 to 0.01 µsec) Dead Time Loss decrease in signal because of uncounted pulses arriving during the dead time. This becomes significant at count rates somewhere between 10 5 & 10 6 counts/sec = upper limit to intensities measured by photon counting

discriminator setting Plot of number of photon counting pulses observed vs pulse heights for 2 conditions, constant light (top) & no light (lower) If discriminator is set too high get too few pulses counted (see upper curve) If set too low get too many pulses counted (lower curve)

discriminator setting Plot of number of photon counting pulses observed vs pulse heights for 2 conditions, constant light (top) & no light (lower) If discriminator is set too high get too few pulses counted (see upper curve) If set too low get too many pulses counted (lower curve)

Image Detectors powerful detectors used instead of PMTs to detect a complete spectrum or part of a spectrum Prism monochromator Exit slit PMT Source Image Detector - located at the focal plane (no exit slit)