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Appl Opt. 2006 Aug 20;45(24):6180-6. doi: 10.1364/ao.45.006180.

Pulsed laser photofragment emission for detection of mercuric chloride.

Applied optics

Alexandra A Hoops, Thomas A Reichardt

Affiliations

  1. Sensing and Energetic Material Department, Combustion Research Facility, Sandia National Laboratories, P.O. Box 969, MS 9056, Livermore, California 94551, USA.

PMID: 16892121 DOI: 10.1364/ao.45.006180

Abstract

The viability of pulsed laser photofragment emission (PFE) is evaluated for the in situ measurement of vapor-phase mercuric chloride (HgCl(2)) concentration in combustion flue gas. Dispersed emissions from both the Hg (6(3)P(1)) and HgCl (B(2)Sigma(+)) photoproducts are presented, and the dependence of the HgCl(2) PFE signal originating from Hg (6(3)P(1)) on the collisional environment is examined for buffer-gas mixtures of N(2), O(2), and CO(2). Integrated PFE intensity measurements as a function of buffer gas pressure support the assumption that the primary effect of the relevant flue gas constituents is to quench emission from Hg (6(3)P(1)). The quenching rate constants for PFE from HgCl(2) were measured to be 1.37 (+/-0.16) x 10(5) Torr(-1) s(-1) for N(2), 9.35 (+/-0.25) x 10(6) Torr(-1) s(-1) for O(2), and 1.49 (+/-0.29) x 10(6) Torr(-1) s(-1) for CO(2). These values are in good accord with literature values for the quenching of Hg (6(3)P(1)). The emission cross section for Hg (6(3)P(1)) generated by photodissociation of HgCl(2) in 760 Torr N(2) is found to be 1.0 (+/-0.2) x 10(-25) m(2) by comparing the PFE signal to N(2) Raman scattering.

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