PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rice University laser scientists create portable sensor for nitrous oxide, methane

Compact device has sensitive nose for greenhouse gases

2014-01-22
(Press-News.org) Contact information: David Ruth
david@rice.edu
713-348-6327
Rice University
Rice University laser scientists create portable sensor for nitrous oxide, methane Compact device has sensitive nose for greenhouse gases Rice University scientists have created a highly sensitive portable sensor to test the air for the most damaging greenhouse gases.

The device created by Rice engineer and laser pioneer Frank Tittel and his group uses a thumbnail-sized quantum cascade laser (QCL) as well as tuning forks that cost no more than a dime to detect very small amounts of nitrous oxide and methane.

The QCL emits light from the mid- to far-infrared portion of the spectrum. That allows for far better detection of gases than more common lasers that operate in the near-infrared.

The technique called quartz-enhanced photoacoustic absorption spectroscopy (QEPAS), invented at Rice by Tittel, Professor Robert Curl and their collaborators in 2002, offers the possibility that such devices may soon be as small as a typical smartphone.

The Rice team's device was detailed this month in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Analyst.

Tittel's team tested the small device at a Houston dump, and found it capable of detecting trace amounts of methane, 13 parts per billion by volume (ppbv), and nitrous oxide, 6 ppbv.

"Methane and nitrous oxide are both significant greenhouse gases emitted from human activities," Tittel said. "Methane is emitted by natural sources, such as wetlands, and human activities, such as leakage from natural gas systems and the raising of livestock.

"Human activities such as agriculture, fossil fuel combustion, wastewater management and industrial processes are increasing the amount of nitrous oxide in the atmosphere. The warming impact of methane and nitrous oxide is more than 20 and 300 times, respectively, greater compared to the most prevalent greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide over a 100-year period. For these reasons, methane and nitrous oxide detection is crucial to environmental considerations."

The small QCL has only become available in recent years, Tittel said, and is far better able to detect trace amounts of gas than lasers used in the past. Previous versions of the QCL are just as effective, but far too bulky for mobile use.

What makes the technique possible is the small quartz tuning fork, which vibrates at a specific frequency when stimulated. "The ones we use are made for digital watches, and are very cheap," said Rice postdoctoral researcher and co-lead author Wei Ren. "The fundamental theory behind this is the photoacoustic effect."

The laser beam is focused between the two prongs of the quartz tuning fork. When light at a specific wavelength is absorbed by the gas of interest, localized heating of the molecules leads to a temperature and pressure increase in the gas. "If the incident light intensity is modulated, then the temperature and pressure will be as well," Ren said. "This generates an acoustic wave with the same frequency as the light modulation, and that excites the quartz tuning fork.

"The tuning fork is a piezoelectric element, so when the wave causes it to vibrate, it produces a voltage we can detect. That signal is proportional to the gas concentration."

The unit can detect the presence of methane or nitrous oxide in as little as a second, he said.

To field test the device, the Rice team installed it on a mobile laboratory used during NASA's DISCOVER-AQ campaign, which analyzed pollution on the ground and from the air last September. (Results from DISCOVER-AQ were discussed in a meeting of air quality scientists at Rice in January.) The lab analyzed emissions from a Houston landfill, and the QEPAS sensor's findings compared favorably to the lab's much larger instrument, Tittel said.

"This was a milestone for trace-gas sensing," Ren said. "Now we're trying to minimize the size of the whole system."

Tittel said smaller QEPAS device will be added this year to the mobile monitoring van currently carrying out a Rice/University of Houston survey of pollutants in the city.

###

Rice postdoctoral researcher Mohammad Jahjah is co-lead author of the paper. Co-authors include Rice graduate student Wenzhe Jiang and former Rice Laser Science Group members Przemystaw Stefanski, Rafat Lewicki, Jiawei Zhang and Jan Tarka. Tittel is the J.S. Abercrombie Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering and a professor of bioengineering.

The National Science Foundation and the Robert Welch Foundation supported the research.

Read the abstract at http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2014/an/c3an01452e#!divAbstract

Follow Rice News and Media Relations via Twitter @RiceUNews

Related Materials:

Rice University Laser Science Group: http://www.ece.rice.edu/~lasersci/

Quartz-enhanced photoacoustic spectroscopy: http://www.opticsinfobase.org/ol/abstract.cfm?uri=ol-27-21-1902

Images for download:

http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/0121_LASER-1.jpeg

The QEPAS sensor, seen in a Rice University lab, is capable of detecting trace amounts of methane and nitrous oxide. The portable unit was tested during NASA's recent DISCOVER-AQ survey of Houston air quality and proved itself the equal of far larger instruments. (Credit: Rice University Laser Science Group)

http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/0121_LASER-2-web.jpg

Rice University laser pioneer Frank Tittel. Photo by Jeff Fitlow

Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation's top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy. With 3,708 undergraduates and 2,374 graduate students, Rice's undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice has been ranked No. 1 for best quality of life multiple times by the Princeton Review and No. 2 for "best value" among private universities by Kiplinger's Personal Finance. To read "What they're saying about Rice," go to http://tinyurl.com/AboutRiceU.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Seashells inspire new way to preserve bones for archeologists, paleontologists

2014-01-22
Seashells inspire new way to preserve bones for archeologists, paleontologists Recreating the story of humanity's past by studying ancient bones can hit a snag when they deteriorate, but scientists are now reporting an advance inspired by seashells that can ...

Toward fixing damaged hearts through tissue engineering

2014-01-22
Toward fixing damaged hearts through tissue engineering In the U.S., someone suffers a heart attack every 34 seconds — their heart is starved of oxygen and suffers irreparable damage. Engineering new heart tissue in the laboratory that could eventually be ...

Suburban sprawl accounts for 50 percent of US household carbon footprint

2014-01-22
Suburban sprawl accounts for 50 percent of US household carbon footprint Many U.S. cities are taking steps to grow urban centers in an attempt to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. But a challenge is the significant carbon footprint of spacious suburban living, ...

Emerging class of therapeutics represents a coming wave for developers and manufacturers

2014-01-22
Emerging class of therapeutics represents a coming wave for developers and manufacturers After years of research, development and testing, a new class of drugs is emerging on the market with two frontrunners acting as harbingers of what's to come. The cover ...

New study examines patterns of cancer screening in Appalachian women

2014-01-22
New study examines patterns of cancer screening in Appalachian women LEXINGTON, Ky. (Jan. 22, 2014) — A new study by University of Kentucky researchers shows that women who never or rarely screen for breast cancer are also unlikely to receive screening for cervical ...

The unexpected power of baby math

2014-01-22
The unexpected power of baby math Tel Aviv University researcher finds that adults still think about numbers like kids Children understand numbers differently than adults. For kids, one and two seem much further apart then 101 and 102, because two is ...

U-Michigan ecologists: No magic bullet for coffee rust eradication

2014-01-22
U-Michigan ecologists: No magic bullet for coffee rust eradication ANN ARBOR—Spraying fungicide to kill coffee rust disease, which has ravaged Latin American plantations since late 2012, is an approach that is "doomed to failure," according to University of Michigan ...

Health disparities among US African-American and Hispanic men cost economy more than $450 billion

2014-01-22
Health disparities among US African-American and Hispanic men cost economy more than $450 billion Greatest economic burden shouldered by African-American and Hispanic men African-American men incurred $341.8 billion in excess medical ...

UCLA researchers develop risk calculator to predict survival in heart failure patients

2014-01-22
UCLA researchers develop risk calculator to predict survival in heart failure patients A UCLA team has developed an easy-to-use "risk calculator" that helps predict heart failure patients' chances of survival for up to five ...

New CU-Boulder study shows differences in mammal responses to climate change

2014-01-22
New CU-Boulder study shows differences in mammal responses to climate change Shrews 27 times less likely to respond to climate change than moose If you were a shrew snuffling around a North American forest, you would be 27 times ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Ground breaking advances in construction robotics in extreme environments unveiled in review

New strategies to enhance chiral optical signals unveiled

Cambridge research uncovers powerful virtual reality treatment for speech anxiety

2025 Gut Microbiota for Health World Summit to spotlight groundbreaking research

International survey finds that support for climate interventions is tied to being hopeful and worried about climate change

Cambridge scientist launches free VR platform that eliminates the fear of public speaking

Open-Source AI matches top proprietary model in solving tough medical cases

Good fences make good neighbors (with carnivores)

NRG Oncology trial supports radiotherapy alone following radical hysterectomy should remain the standard of care for early-stage, intermediate-risk cervical cancer

Introducing our new cohort of AGA Future Leaders

Sharks are dying at alarming rates, mostly due to fishing. Retention bans may help

Engineering excellence: Engineers with ONR ties elected to renowned scientific academy

New CRISPR-based diagnostic test detects pathogens in blood without amplification

Immunotherapy may boost KRAS-targeted therapy in pancreatic cancer

Growing solar: Optimizing agrivoltaic systems for crops and clean energy

Scientists discover how to reactivate cancer’s molecular “kill switch”

YouTube influencers: gaming’s best friend or worst enemy?

uOttawa scientists use light to unlock secret of atoms

NJIT mathematician to help map Earth's last frontier with Navy grant

NASA atmospheric wave-studying mission releases data from first 3,000 orbits

‘Microlightning’ in water droplets may have sparked life on Earth

Smoke from wildland-urban interface fires more deadly than remote wildfires

What’s your body really worth? New AI model reveals your true biological age from 5 drops of blood

Protein accidentally lassos itself, helping explain unusual refolding behavior

With bird flu in raw milk, many in U.S. still do not know risks of consuming it

University of Minnesota research team awarded $3.8 million grant to develop cell therapy to combat Alzheimer’s disease

UConn uncovers new clue on what is leading to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s and ALS

Resuscitation in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest – it’s how quickly it is done, rather than who does it

A closer look at biomolecular ‘silly putty’

Oxytocin system of breastfeeding affected in mothers with postnatal depression

[Press-News.org] Rice University laser scientists create portable sensor for nitrous oxide, methane
Compact device has sensitive nose for greenhouse gases