Sensitive impulsive stimulated Brillouin spectroscopy by an adaptive noise-suppression Matrix Pencil

  • Li J
  • Zhang H
  • Lu M
  • et al.
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Abstract

Impulsive stimulated Brillouin spectroscopy (ISBS) plays a critical role in investigating mechanical properties thanks to its fast measurement rate. However, traditional Fourier transform-based data processing cannot decipher measured data sensitively because of its incompetence in dealing with low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) signals caused by a short exposure time and weak signals in a multi-peak spectrum. Here, we propose an adaptive noise-suppression Matrix Pencil method for heterodyne ISBS as an alternative spectral analysis technique, speeding up the measurement regardless of the low SNR and enhancing the sensitivity of multi-component viscoelastic identification. The algorithm maintains accuracy of 0.005% for methanol sound speed even when the SNR drops 33 dB and the exposure time is reduced to 0.4 ms. Moreover, it proves to extract a weak component that accounts for 6% from a polymer mixture, which is inaccessible for the traditional method. With its outstanding ability to sensitively decipher weak signals without spectral a priori information and regardless of low SNRs or concentrations, this method offers a fresh perspective for ISBS on fast viscoelasticity measurements and multi-component identifications.

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APA

Li, J., Zhang, H., Lu, M., Wei, H., & Li, Y. (2022). Sensitive impulsive stimulated Brillouin spectroscopy by an adaptive noise-suppression Matrix Pencil. Optics Express, 30(16), 29598. https://doi.org/10.1364/oe.465106

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