Quartz-enhanced photoacoustic spectroscopy (QEPAS) offers high sensitivity for trace-gas detection, but its performance is often limited by a spatial mismatch between distributed photoacoustic excitation and the intrinsic sensitivity region of the quartz tuning fork (QTF). In many multi-pass QEPAS configurations, extending the optical path length alone does not ensure efficient signal enhancement. Here, we present a spatially engineered optical–acoustic matching strategy for QEPAS. A confocal-like multi-pass cell folds the excitation beam multiple times while spatially confining optical absorption within the intrinsic high-sensitivity region of the QTF. In parallel, non-resonant conical acoustic collectors (CACs) geometrically match and efficiently collect the resulting distributed photoacoustic waves. Experimental validation using water vapor detection demonstrates an approximately 42-fold signal enhancement compared with a conventional single-pass QEPAS configuration under identical conditions. The enhancement is achieved without relying on narrowband acoustic resonance or stringent optical alignment, establishing spatial engineering as a robust and general framework for improving QEPAS performance.
Spatially engineered optical–acoustic matching in quartz-enhanced photoacoustic spectroscopy / Cui, Ruyue; Han, Wenfei; Wang, Chenglong; Li, Chunxia; Ren, Yingzhang; Li, Xinran; Xu, Jiale; Spagnolo, Vincenzo; Chen, Weidong; Wu, Hongpeng; Dong, Lei. - In: PHOTOACOUSTICS. - ISSN 2213-5979. - ELETTRONICO. - 48:(2026). [10.1016/j.pacs.2026.100811]
Spatially engineered optical–acoustic matching in quartz-enhanced photoacoustic spectroscopy
Spagnolo, Vincenzo;Wu, Hongpeng;Dong, Lei
2026
Abstract
Quartz-enhanced photoacoustic spectroscopy (QEPAS) offers high sensitivity for trace-gas detection, but its performance is often limited by a spatial mismatch between distributed photoacoustic excitation and the intrinsic sensitivity region of the quartz tuning fork (QTF). In many multi-pass QEPAS configurations, extending the optical path length alone does not ensure efficient signal enhancement. Here, we present a spatially engineered optical–acoustic matching strategy for QEPAS. A confocal-like multi-pass cell folds the excitation beam multiple times while spatially confining optical absorption within the intrinsic high-sensitivity region of the QTF. In parallel, non-resonant conical acoustic collectors (CACs) geometrically match and efficiently collect the resulting distributed photoacoustic waves. Experimental validation using water vapor detection demonstrates an approximately 42-fold signal enhancement compared with a conventional single-pass QEPAS configuration under identical conditions. The enhancement is achieved without relying on narrowband acoustic resonance or stringent optical alignment, establishing spatial engineering as a robust and general framework for improving QEPAS performance.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

