Fluorescence lifetime detection is widely used for sensing physical and chemical quantities. The measurement accuracy of fluorescence lifetime-based sensing systems, either in time or frequency domain relies on their capability of detection and analysis of low level signal superimposed to noise. In this work a quantitative assessment of several data processing and analysis methods for the estimation of the fluorescence lifetime was carried out by using an experimental arrangement based on a fiber optic temperature sensor system. A comparison between the various methods was performed using actual signals from an optical sensing medium. The basic principles of time- and frequency-domain lifetime measurements were also reviewed and discussed in order to point out the limit of the cw frequency-domain approach and to suggest a way to overcome it. The investigated lifetime interval was from 200 to about 2200 s, corresponding to a temperature span of the sensor of about 300 °C. The results showed that in time domain such as with Marquardt, integration, and log-fit algorithms a good agreement, with relative differences from 0.2% to 0.5%, can be reached. Frequency-domain results based on an N-point fast Fourier transform FFT compare favorably with the previous ones in the long lifetime region resulting in relative differences lower than 0.2% with larger differences for short lifetimes. For each data processing method, the uncertainty associated with lifetime estimation was evaluated. Sampling and harmonics effects on the estimation accuracy for N-point FFTs were also investigated to trade-off between speed and accuracy of the algorithm in view of its application in real-time detection systems.

Time-and-Frequency-domain Analyses of Fluorescence Lifetime for Temperature Sensing / Rosso, Lucia; Fernicola, Vito. - In: REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS. - ISSN 0034-6748. - 77:(2006), pp. 034901-1-034901-6. [10.1063/1.2176085]

Time-and-Frequency-domain Analyses of Fluorescence Lifetime for Temperature Sensing

ROSSO, LUCIA;FERNICOLA, VITO
2006

Abstract

Fluorescence lifetime detection is widely used for sensing physical and chemical quantities. The measurement accuracy of fluorescence lifetime-based sensing systems, either in time or frequency domain relies on their capability of detection and analysis of low level signal superimposed to noise. In this work a quantitative assessment of several data processing and analysis methods for the estimation of the fluorescence lifetime was carried out by using an experimental arrangement based on a fiber optic temperature sensor system. A comparison between the various methods was performed using actual signals from an optical sensing medium. The basic principles of time- and frequency-domain lifetime measurements were also reviewed and discussed in order to point out the limit of the cw frequency-domain approach and to suggest a way to overcome it. The investigated lifetime interval was from 200 to about 2200 s, corresponding to a temperature span of the sensor of about 300 °C. The results showed that in time domain such as with Marquardt, integration, and log-fit algorithms a good agreement, with relative differences from 0.2% to 0.5%, can be reached. Frequency-domain results based on an N-point fast Fourier transform FFT compare favorably with the previous ones in the long lifetime region resulting in relative differences lower than 0.2% with larger differences for short lifetimes. For each data processing method, the uncertainty associated with lifetime estimation was evaluated. Sampling and harmonics effects on the estimation accuracy for N-point FFTs were also investigated to trade-off between speed and accuracy of the algorithm in view of its application in real-time detection systems.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11696/34668
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 25
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 20
social impact