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Dive into the research topics where Kevin O. Douglass is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin O. Douglass.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

A broadband Fourier transform microwave spectrometer based on chirped pulse excitation

Gordon G. Brown; Brian C. Dian; Kevin O. Douglass; Scott M. Geyer; Steven T. Shipman; Brooks H. Pate

Designs for a broadband chirped pulse Fourier transform microwave (CP-FTMW) spectrometer are presented. The spectrometer is capable of measuring the 7-18 GHz region of a rotational spectrum in a single data acquisition. One design uses a 4.2 Gsampless arbitrary waveform generator (AWG) to produce a 1 mus duration chirped pulse with a linear frequency sweep of 1.375 GHz. This pulse is sent through a microwave circuit to multiply the bandwidth of the pulse by a factor of 8 and upconvert it to the 7.5-18.5 GHz range. The chirped pulse is amplified by a traveling wave tube amplifier and broadcast inside the spectrometer by using a double ridge standard gain horn antenna. The broadband molecular free induction decay (FID) is received by a second horn antenna, downconverted, and digitized by a 40 Gsampless (12 GHz hardware bandwidth) digital oscilloscope. The second design uses a simplified pulse generation and FID detection scheme, employing current state-of-the-art high-speed digital electronics. In this spectrometer, a chirped pulse with 12 GHz of bandwidth is directly generated by using a 20 Gsampless AWG and upconverted in a single step with an ultrabroadband mixer. The amplified molecular emission is directly detected by using a 50 Gsampless digital oscilloscope with 18 GHz bandwidth. In both designs, fast Fourier transform of the FID produces the frequency domain rotational spectrum in the 7-18 GHz range. The performance of the CP-FTMW spectrometer is compared to a Balle-Flygare-type cavity-FTMW spectrometer. The CP-FTMW spectrometer produces an equal sensitivity spectrum with a factor of 40 reduction in measurement time and a reduction in sample consumption by a factor of 20. The CP-FTMW spectrometer also displays good intensity accuracy for both sample number density and rotational transition moment. Strategies to reduce the CP-FTMW measurement time by another factor of 90 while simultaneously reducing the sample consumption by a factor of 30 are demonstrated.


Science | 2008

Measuring Picosecond Isomerization Kinetics via Broadband Microwave Spectroscopy

Brian C. Dian; Gordon G. Brown; Kevin O. Douglass; Brooks H. Pate

The rotational spectrum of a highly excited molecule is qualitatively different from its pure rotational spectrum and contains information about the intramolecular dynamics. We have developed a broadband Fourier transform microwave spectrometer that uses chirped-pulse excitation to measure a rotational spectrum in the 7.5- to 18.5-gigahertz range in a single shot and thereby reduces acquisition time sufficiently to couple molecular rotational spectroscopy with tunable laser excitation. After vibrationally exciting a single molecular conformation of cyclopropane carboxaldehyde above the barrier to C–C single-bond isomerization, we applied line-shape analysis of the dynamic rotational spectrum to reveal a product yield and picosecond reaction rate that were significantly different from statistical predictions. The technique should be widely applicable to dynamical studies of radical intermediates, molecular complexes, and conformationally flexible molecules with biological interest.


Optics Express | 2011

Chirped-pulse terahertz spectroscopy for broadband trace gas sensing

Eyal Gerecht; Kevin O. Douglass; David F. Plusquellic

We report the first demonstration of a broadband trace gas sensor based on chirp-pulse terahertz spectroscopy. The advent of newly developed solid state sources and sensitive heterodyne detectors for the terahertz frequency range have made it possible to generate and detect precise arbitrary waveforms at THz frequencies with ultra-low phase noise. In order to maximize sensitivity, the sample gas is first polarized using sub-μs chirped THz pulses and the free inductive decays (FIDs) are then detected using a heterodyne receiver. This approach allows for a rapid broadband multi-component sensing with low parts in 10(9) (ppb) sensitivities and spectral frequency accuracy of <20 kHz in real-time. Such a system can be configured into a portable, easy to use, and relatively inexpensive sensing platform.


Optics Letters | 2014

Multiheterodyne spectroscopy with optical frequency combs generated from a continuous-wave laser

David Long; Adam J. Fleisher; Kevin O. Douglass; Stephen E. Maxwell; Katarzyna Bielska; Joseph T. Hodges; David F. Plusquellic

Dual-drive Mach-Zehnder modulators were utilized to produce power-leveled optical frequency combs (OFCs) from a continuous-wave laser. The resulting OFCs contained up to 50 unique frequency components and spanned more than 200 GHz. Simple changes to the modulation frequency allowed for agile control of the comb spacing. These OFCs were then utilized for broadband, multiheterodyne measurements of CO2 using both a multipass cell and an optical cavity. This technique allows for robust measurements of trace gas species and alleviates much of the cost and complexity associated with the use of femtosecond OFCs produced with mode-locked pulsed lasers.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Microwave measurements of proton tunneling and structural parameters for the propiolic acid–formic acid dimer

Adam M. Daly; Kevin O. Douglass; Laszlo Sarkozy; Justin L. Neill; Matt T. Muckle; Daniel P. Zaleski; Brooks H. Pate; Stephen G. Kukolich

Microwave spectra of the propiolic acid-formic acid doubly hydrogen bonded complex were measured in the 1 GHz to 21 GHz range using four different Fourier transform spectrometers. Rotational spectra for seven isotopologues were obtained. For the parent isotopologue, a total of 138 a-dipole transitions and 28 b-dipole transitions were measured for which the a-dipole transitions exhibited splittings of a few MHz into pairs of lines and the b-type dipole transitions were split by ~580 MHz. The transitions assigned to this complex were fit to obtain rotational and distortion constants for both tunneling levels: A(0+) = 6005.289(8), B(0+) = 930.553(8), C(0+) = 803.9948(6) MHz, Δ(0+)(J) = 0.075(1), Δ(0+)(JK) = 0.71(1), and δ(0+)(j) = -0.010(1) kHz and A(0-) = 6005.275(8), B(0-) = 930.546(8), C(0-) = 803.9907(5) MHz, Δ(0-)(J) = 0.076(1), Δ(0-)(JK) = 0.70(2), and δ(0-)(j) = -0.008(1) kHz. Double resonance experiments were used on some transitions to verify assignments and to obtain splittings for cases when the b-dipole transitions were difficult to measure. The experimental difference in energy between the two tunneling states is 291.428(5) MHz for proton-proton exchange and 3.35(2) MHz for the deuterium-deuterium exchange. The vibration-rotation coupling constant between the two levels, F(ab), is 120.7(2) MHz for the proton-proton exchange. With one deuterium atom substituted in either of the hydrogen-bonding protons, the tunneling splittings were not observed for a-dipole transitions, supporting the assignment of the splitting to the concerted proton tunneling motion. The spectra were obtained using three Flygare-Balle type spectrometers and one chirped-pulse machine at the University of Virginia. Rotational constants and centrifugal distortion constants were obtained for HCOOH···HOOCCCH, H(13)COOH···HOOCCCH, HCOOD···HOOCCCH, HCOOH···DOOCCCH, HCOOD···DOOCCCH, DCOOH···HOOCCCH, and DCOOD···HOOCCCH. High-level ab initio calculations provided initial rotational constants for the complex, structural parameters, and some details of the proton tunneling potential energy surface. A least squares fit to the isotopic data reveals a planar structure that is slightly asymmetric in the OH distances. The formic OH···O propiolic hydrogen bond length is 1.8 Å and the propiolic OH···O formic hydrogen bond length is 1.6 Å, for the equilibrium configuration. The magnitude of the dipole moment was experimentally determined to be 1.95(3) × 10(-30) C m (0.584(8) D) for the 0(+) states and 1.92(5) × 10(-30) C m (0.576(14) D) for the 0(-) states.


Optics Express | 2013

Segmented chirped-pulse Fourier transform submillimeter spectroscopy for broadband gas analysis.

Justin L. Neill; Brent J. Harris; Amanda L. Steber; Kevin O. Douglass; David F. Plusquellic; Brooks H. Pate

Chirped-pulse Fourier transform spectroscopy has recently been extended to millimeter wave spectroscopy as a technique for the characterization of room-temperature gas samples. Here we present a variation of this technique that significantly reduces the technical requirements on high-speed digital electronics and the data throughput, with no reduction in the broadband spectral coverage and no increase in the time required to reach a given sensitivity level. This method takes advantage of the frequency agility of arbitrary waveform generators by utilizing a series of low-bandwidth chirped excitation pulses paired in time with a series of offset single frequency local oscillators, which are used to detect the molecular free induction decay signals in a heterodyne receiver. A demonstration of this technique is presented in which a 67 GHz bandwidth spectrum of methanol (spanning from 792 to 859 GHz) is acquired in 58 μs.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Rotationally resolved studies of S0 and the exciton coupled S1/S2 origin regions of diphenylmethane and the d12 isotopologue

Jaime A. Stearns; Nathan R. Pillsbury; Kevin O. Douglass; Christian W. Müller; Timothy S. Zwier; David F. Plusquellic

Rotationally resolved microwave and ultraviolet spectra of jet-cooled diphenylmethane (DPM) and DPM-d(12) have been obtained in S(0), S(1), and S(2) electronic states using Fourier-transform microwave and UV laser/molecular beam spectrometers. The S(0) and S(1) states of both isotopologues have been well fit to asymmetric rotor Hamiltonians that include only Watson distortion parameters. The transition dipole moment (TDM) orientations of DPM and DPM-d(12) are perpendicular to the C(2) symmetry axes with 66(2)%:34(2)% a:c hybrid-type character, establishing the lower exciton S(1) origin as a completely delocalized, antisymmetric combination of the zero-order locally excited states of the toluene-like chromophores. In contrast, the rotational structures of the S(2) origin bands at S(1)+123 cm(-1) and S(1)+116 cm(-1), respectively, display b-type Q-branch transitions and lack the central a-type Q-branch features that characterize the S(1) origins, indicating TDM orientations parallel to the C(2)(b) symmetry axes as anticipated for the upper exciton levels. However, rotational fits were not possible in line with expectations from previous work [N. R. Pillsbury, J. A. Stearns, C. W. Muller, T. S. Zwier, and D. F. Plusquellic, J. Chem. Phys. 129, 114301 (2008)] where the S(2) origins were found to be largely perturbed through vibronic interactions with the S(1) symmetric, antisymmetric torsional, and butterfly levels in close proximity. Predictions from a dipole-dipole coupling model and ab initio theories are shown to be in fair agreement with the observed TDM orientations and exciton splitting. The need to include out-of-ring-plane dipole coupling terms indicates that in-plane models are not sufficient to fully account for the excitonic interactions in this bichromophore.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Conformational isomerization kinetics of pent-1-en-4-yne with 3,330 cm 1 of internal energy measured by dynamic rotational spectroscopy

Brian C. Dian; Gordon G. Brown; Kevin O. Douglass; Frances S. Rees; James E. Johns; Pradeep M. Nair; R. D. Suenram; Brooks H. Pate

We demonstrate the application of molecular rotational spectroscopy to measure the conformation isomerization rate of vibrationally excited pent-1-en-4-yne (pentenyne). The rotational spectra of single quantum states of pentenyne are acquired by using a combination of IR–Fourier transform microwave double-resonance spectroscopy and high-resolution, single-photon IR spectroscopy. The quantum states probed in these experiments have energy eigenvalues of ≈3,330 cm−1 and lie above the barrier to conformational isomerization. At this energy, the presence of intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution (IVR) is indicated through the extensive local perturbations found in the high-resolution rotation–vibration spectrum of the acetylenic C–H stretch normal-mode fundamental. The fact that the IVR process produces isomerization is deduced through a qualitatively different appearance of the excited-state rotational spectra compared with the pure rotational spectra of pentenyne. The rotational spectra of the vibrationally excited molecular eigenstates display coalescence between the characteristic rotational frequencies of the stable cis and skew conformations of the molecule. This coalescence is observed for quantum states prepared from laser excitation originating in the ground vibrational state of either of the two stable conformers. Experimental isomerization rates are extracted by using a three-state Bloch model of the dynamic rotational spectra that includes the effects of chemical exchange between the stable conformations. The time scale for the conformational isomerization rate of pentenyne at total energy of 3,330 cm−1 is ≈25 ps and is 50 times slower than the microcanonical isomerization rate predicted by the statistical Rice–Ramsperger–Kassel–Marcus theory.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2003

Rotational spectroscopy of vibrationally excited states by infrared-Fourier transform microwave–microwave triple-resonance spectroscopy

Kevin O. Douglass; John C. Keske; Frances S. Rees; Kevin Welch; Hyun S. Yoo; Brooks H. Pate; Igor Leonov; R. D. Suenram

A Fourier transform microwave (FTMW) spectroscopy-based technique for measuring the rotational spectrum of vibrational excited states is demonstrated. A pulsed infrared laser is used to prepare the excited state outside the FTMW cavity. Following laser excitation, the molecules drift into the FTMW cavity region. The FTMW spectrometer is used to monitor a single rotational transition in the excited state. The rotational spectrum of one of the states involved in the transition monitored by the FTMW spectrometer is obtained through the Autler–Townes splitting of the quantum state caused by the application of resonant microwave radiation to the cavity region.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

Rotationally resolved C2 symmetric conformers of bis-(4-hydroxyphenyl)methane: prototypical examples of excitonic coupling in the S1 and S2 electronic states.

Shin G. Chou; Chirantha P. Rodrigo; Christian W. Müller; Kevin O. Douglass; Timothy S. Zwier; David F. Plusquellic

Rotationally resolved microwave and ultraviolet spectra of jet-cooled bis-(4-hydroxyphenyl)methane (b4HPM) have been obtained using Fourier-transform microwave and UV laser/molecular beam spectrometers. A recent vibronic level study of b4HPM [Rodrigo, C. P.; Müller, C. W.; Pillsbury, N. R.; James, W. H., III; Plusquellic, D. F.; Zwier, T. S. J. Chem. Phys. 2011, 134, 164312] has assigned two conformers distinguished by the orientation of the in-plane OH groups and has identified two excitonic origins in each conformer. In the present study, the rotationally resolved bands of all four states have been well-fit to asymmetric rotor Hamiltonians. For the lower exciton (S(1)) levels, the transition dipole moment (TDM) orientations are perpendicular to the C(2) symmetry axes and consist of 41(2):59(2) and 34(2):66(2)% a:c hybrid-type character. The S(1) levels are therefore delocalized states of B symmetry and represent the antisymmetric combinations of the zero-order locally excited states of the p-cresol-like chromophores. The TDM polarizations of bands located at ≈132 cm(-1) above the S(1) origins are exclusively b-type and identify them as the upper exciton S(2) origin levels of A symmetry. The TDM orientations and the relative band strengths from the vibronic study have been analyzed within a dipole-dipole coupling model in terms of the localized TDM orientations, μ(loc), on the two chromophores. The out-of-the-ring plane angles of μ(loc) are both near 20° and are similar to results for diphenylmethane [Stearns, J. A.; Pillsbury, N. R.; Douglass, K. O.; Müller, C. W.; Zwier, T. S.; Plusquellic, D. F. J. Chem. Phys. 2008, 129, 224305]. The in-plane angles are, however, rotated by 14 and 18° relative to DPM and, in part, explain the smaller than expected exciton splittings of these two conformers.

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David F. Plusquellic

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Joseph T. Hodges

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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R. D. Suenram

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Stephen E. Maxwell

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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David Long

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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