I have a Horiba XPlora Raman spectrometer equipped with 3 lasers: 532, 638 and 785 nm. 532 nm burns the wood samples, even at 0.1% of its power, and gives unexploitable spectra. 638 nm laser may burn the samples, but even at low power gives a huge fluorescence background from which peaks emerge. However, after baseline correction, the spectra are very bad as the relative intensities of the peak are whatever. The 785 nm laser still gives a significant fluorescence, as the baseline is strongly tilted. Baseline correction gives better spectra, but not very satisfactory either. I have read several papers showing nice spectra obtained at 532 nm, according to the authors, but I don't understand how it has been possible. Does anyone can help getting nice spectra with horizontal baselines and meaningful peak intensities ? I have tried everything I could do: changing objectives, slits, confocal holes, laser power, acquisition time and accumulation, etc., but no significant improvement could be obtained.

More Alain Celzard's questions See All
Similar questions and discussions