Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy - Mid-infrared FTIR

Mid-infrared FTIR

With the advent of cheap microcomputers it became possible to have a computer dedicated to controlling the spectrometer, collecting the data, doing the Fourier transform and presenting the spectrum. This provided the impetus for the development of FTIR spectrometers for the rock-salt region. The problems of manufacturing ultra-high precision optical and mechanical components had to be solved. A wide range of instruments are now available commercially. Although instrument design has become more sophisticated, the basic principles remain the same. Nowadays, the moving mirror of the interferometer moves at a constant velocity, and sampling of the interferogram is triggered by finding zero-crossings in the fringes of a secondary interferometer lit by a helium-neon laser. This confers high wavenumber accuracy on the resulting infrared spectrum and avoids wavenumber calibration errors.

Read more about this topic:  Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy