Title :
Millimeter-wave radar sensing of airborne chemicals
Author :
Gopalsami, Nachappa ; Raptis, Apostolos C.
Author_Institution :
Energy Technol. Div., Argonne Nat. Lab., IL, USA
fDate :
4/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper discusses the development of a millimeter-wave radar chemical sensor for applications in environmental monitoring and arms-control treaty verification. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the use of fingerprint-type molecular rotational signatures in the millimeter-wave spectrum to sense airborne chemicals. The millimeter-wave sensor, operating in the frequency range of 225-315 GHz, can work under all weather conditions and in smoky and dusty environments. The basic configuration of the millimeter-wave sensor is a monostatic swept-frequency radar that consists of a millimeter-wave sweeper, a hot-electron bolometer or Schottky barrier detector, and a corner-cube reflector. The chemical plume to be detected is situated between the transmitter/detector and reflector. Millimeter-wave absorption spectra of chemicals in the plume are determined by measuring the swept-frequency radar return signals with and without the plume in the beam path. The problem of pressure broadening, which hampered open-path spectroscopy in the past, has been mitigated in this paper by designing a fast sweeping source over a broad frequency range. The heart of the system is a backward-wave oscillator (BWO) tube that can be tuned over 220-350 GHz. Using the BWO tube, we built a millimeter-wave radar system and field-tested it at the Department of Energy Nevada Test Site, Frenchman Flat, near Mercury, NV, at a standoff distance of 60 m, The millimeter-wave system detected chemical plumes very well; detection sensitivity for polar molecules such as methylchloride was down to 12 ppm for a 4-m two-way pathlength
Keywords :
air pollution measurement; backward wave oscillators; bolometers; chemical sensors; millimetre wave detectors; millimetre wave tubes; remote sensing by radar; 225 to 315 GHz; 60 m; Schottky barrier detector; airborne chemicals; arms-control treaty verification; backward-wave oscillator tube; chemical plume; chemical sensor; corner-cube reflector; detection sensitivity; dusty environments; environmental monitoring; fingerprint-type molecular rotational signatures; hot-electron bolometer; methylchloride; millimeter-wave radar sensing; monostatic swept-frequency radar; polar molecules; pressure broadening; radar return signals; smoky environments; Bolometers; Chemical sensors; Detectors; Fingerprint recognition; Frequency; Millimeter wave measurements; Millimeter wave radar; Radar detection; Schottky barriers; Transmitters;
Journal_Title :
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on