The customer from the BIOCEV research centre has been studying biopolymers such as proteins, nucleic acids and carbohydrates for a long time. To analyse them, he used, among other things, mass spectroscopy, in which information is extracted from fragments of the original polymers. In the existing set-up, the customer obtained these fragments by dissociating the polymers using a CO2 laser fed directly into the vacuum chamber of the spectrometer.
Now the customer wanted to add the possibility to dissociate the polymers in the chamber using an excimer laser, whose 193 nm wavelength reacts with the polymers in a significantly different way than the infrared radiation of the CO2 laser (10.2 um). Thus, the basic challenge of the project was to guide the lasers into the same path so that one, the other or both could be used simultaneously.