Abstract

We performed high-resolution Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy of a polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) sphere of unknown size in the Mie scattering region. Apart from a slow, oscillatory structure (wiggles), which is due to an interference effect, the measured FTIR extinction spectrum exhibits a ripple structure, which is due to electromagnetic resonances. We fully characterize the underlying electromagnetic mode structure of the spectrum by assigning mode numbers to each of the ripples in the measured spectrum. We show that analyzing the ripple structure in the spectrum in the wavenumber region from about 3000 cm-1 to 8000 cm-1 allows us to determine both the unknown radius of the sphere and the PMMA index of refraction, which shows a strong frequency dependence in this infrared spectral region. While in this paper we focus on examining a PMMA sphere as an example, our method of determining the refractive index and its dispersion from infrared extinction spectra is generally applicable for the determination of the index of refraction of any transparent substance that can be shaped into micron-sized spheres.

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