%0 Journal Article %J Photonics Research %D 2016 %T Modulated orientation-sensitive terahertz spectroscopy %A Singh, R. %A George, D. K. %A Bae, C. J. %A Niessen, K. A. %A Markelz, A. G. %K absorption-spectroscopy %K dynamics %K enzyme catalysis %K low-frequency modes %K lysozyme %K neutron-scattering %K Optics %K perspective %K polarization modulation %K proteins %K water %X

Intramolecular vibrations of large macromolecules reside in the terahertz range. In particular, protein vibrations are closely spaced in frequency, resulting in a nearly continuous vibrational density of states. This density of vibrations interferes with the identification of specific absorption lines and their subsequent association with specific functional motions. This challenge is compounded with the absorption being dominated by the solvent and local relaxational motions. A strategy for removing the isotropic relaxational loss and isolating specific vibrations is to use aligned samples and polarization-sensitive measurements. Here, we demonstrate a technique to rapidly attain the anisotropic resonant absorbance using terahertz time domain spectroscopy and a spinning sample. The technique, modulated orientation-sensitive terahertz spectroscopy (MOSTS), has a nonzero signal only for anisotropic samples, as demonstrated by a comparison between a silicon wafer and a wire grid polarizer. For sucrose and oxalic acid molecular crystals, the MOSTS response is in agreement with modeled results for the intermolecular vibrations. Further, we demonstrate that, even in the presence of a large relaxational background, MOSTS isolates underlying vibrational resonances. (C) 2016 Chinese Laser Press

%B Photonics Research %V 4 %P A1-A8 %8 Jun %@ 2327-9125 %G English %9 Article %M WOS:000376658500001 %! Photonics Res.Photonics Res. %R https://doi.org/10.1364/PRJ.4.0000A1