Microfabricated alkali vapor cell with anti-relaxation wall coating
Author(s)
Straessle, Rahel
Pétremand, Yves
Briand, Danick
de Rooij, Nicolas F.
Date issued
2014
In
Applied Physics Letters, American Institute of Physics
Vol
105
No
4
From page
1
To page
4
Abstract
We present a microfabricated alkali vapor cell equipped with an anti-relaxation wall coating. The anti-relaxation coating used is octadecyltrichlorosilane and the cell was sealed by thin-film indium-bonding at a low temperature of 140 °C. The cell body is made of silicon and Pyrex and features a double-chamber design. Depolarizing properties due to liquid Rb droplets are avoided by confining the Rb droplets to one chamber only. Optical and microwave spectroscopy performed on this wallcoated cell are used to evaluate the cell’s relaxation properties and a potential gas contamination. Double-resonance signals obtained from the cell show an intrinsic linewidth that is significantly lower than the linewidth that would be expected in case the cell had no wall coating but only contained a buffer-gas contamination on the level measured by optical spectroscopy. Combined with further experimental evidence this proves the presence of a working anti-relaxation wall coating in the cell. Such cells are of interest for applications in miniature atomic clocks, magnetometers, and other quantum sensors.
Publication type
journal article
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