Kazançlı kombinasyonlar oluşturmak için bahsegel analizlerini takip edin.

Her cihazda çalışan bahsegel uygulaması kullanıcı dostu arayüzüyle dikkat çekiyor.

Kullanıcılar, güvenli erişim sağlamak için bahsegel sayfasını tercih ediyor.

Adres değişikliklerinden haberdar olmak için pinco düzenli kontrol edilmeli.

Bahisçilerin finansal işlemleri koruyan bettilt altyapısı vazgeçilmezdir.

March 26, 2026 by Li Zhengang and Zhao Weiwei, Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Collected at: https://techxplore.com/news/2026-03-ultra-sensitive-method-hydrogen-complex.html

As a promising clean energy source, hydrogen (H2) requires reliable safety monitoring. However, lacking a permanent dipole moment, it is “infrared-inactive” and cannot be effectively measured by conventional absorption-based techniques. Although Raman spectroscopy can provide molecular fingerprinting, its extremely weak signal limits sensitivity. Together, these factors hinder real-time hydrogen monitoring in complex industrial environments.

A research team led by Fang Yonghua from the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, has developed a novel method called Differential Photoacoustic Stimulated Raman Spectroscopy (DPA-SRS), which enables high-sensitivity hydrogen detection at concentrations as low as 1 ppm under atmospheric pressure.

The study is published in Photoacoustics.

The DPA-SRS technique integrated stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) with photoacoustic detection to significantly enhance signal strength.

A 532 nm pump beam generated a high-intensity 683 nm Stokes beam, forming a dual-color excitation field that matched the vibrational energy levels of hydrogen. This process induced stimulated Raman transitions, followed by vibration-to-translation (V–T) relaxation, which converted molecular excitation into detectable acoustic signals.

By combining a custom-designed differential H-type resonant photoacoustic cell with advanced weak-signal processing algorithms, the proposed DPA-SRS system achieved a minimum detection limit of 0.65 ppm (3σ) for hydrogen.

This work provides a new strategy for the high-sensitivity detection of trace non-polar gases in complex environments, paving the way for improved hydrogen safety monitoring in future energy systems, according to the team.

More information

Xin Yu et al, Differential photoacoustic-stimulated Raman spectroscopy (DPA-SRS) for high-sensitivity hydrogen detection, Photoacoustics (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.pacs.2026.100814

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