The present invention relates to compact gas-filled cells. More particularly, the present invention relates to methods of fabricating compact hollow cells and filling the compact cells with alkali-atom vapor with the optional inclusion of a buffer gas or gases.
Atomic clocks are utilized in various systems which require extremely accurate and stable frequencies, such as in bistatic radars, GPS (global positioning system) and other navigation and positioning systems. Atomic clocks are also used in communications systems, cellular phone systems and for conducting various types of scientific experiments.
One type of atomic clock utilizes a cell containing an active medium such as cesium (or rubidium) vapor. The alkali vapor cell functions as a container for atoms that have natural resonant frequencies when irradiated with optical energy at a given frequency/wavelength. Light from an optical source pumps the atoms of the vapor from a ground state to a higher state from which they fall to a state which is at a hyperfine frequency different from the initial ground state. A microwave signal can then be applied to the vapor cell and an oscillator controlling the microwave signal can be tuned to a particular frequency so as to repopulate the initial ground state. In this manner a controlled amount of the light is propagated from the cell and detected by means of a photodetector.
By examining the output of the photodetector, a control means provides various control signals to the oscillator to ensure that the wavelength of the propagated light and microwave frequency are precisely controlled, e.g. so that the microwave input frequency and hyperfine wavelength frequency are locked. The oscillator thereafter provides a highly accurate and stable frequency output signal for use as a frequency standard or atomic clock.
The current method of fabricating atom vapor cells is based on conventional glass-blowing techniques. In these methods, the cell preform is typically made by fusing glass windows onto a glass tube with a fill-hole in the side. A filling tube is attached using a torch and the cell is then attached to a vacuum system for cleaning and filling.
There is a need, both in the military and civilian sectors, for an ultra small, completely portable, highly accurate and extremely low power atomic clocks. In many applications such atomic clocks must operate continuously for 24 hours per day to perform useful functions. For this reason and the desire to allow battery powered operation, power requirements approaching 100 milliwatts, or less, are desirable for military and many civilian uses.
The non-electronic portion of an atomic clock, often referred to as the physics package, can in some cases be the limiting factor that determines the size, low power capabilities and ultimate low cost of the final product.
It is a primary object of the present invention to provide novel designs and fabrication methods that will allow constructions of very compact alkali atom vapor cells (volumes less than {fraction (1/100)} of previous state of the art) that can be integrated into physics package apparatus for atomic clocks, magnetometers and other applications including atomic physics related to spectroscopy.
According to various features, characteristics and embodiments of the present invention which will become apparent as the description thereof proceeds, the present invention provides a design and method of fabricating compact cells containing alkali atom vapor which involves the following steps:
The present invention further provides a physics package for an atomic frequency reference that comprises an alkali vapor filled cell having a volume of 1 cm3 or less, which alkali vapor filled cell is produced by the steps of:
The present invention will be described with reference to the attached drawings which are given as non-limiting examples only, in which:
a is a schematic of an alkali vapor cell fabricated from a hollow fiber by the laser heating method depicted in
b is a photograph of the alkali vapor cell similar to
a is a graph of the optical absorption spectrum of Cs in the gas phase stored in a small cell similar to the cell shown in
b is a graph of the dark-line microwave resonance that is suitable for used in an atomic frequency reference of the same cell.
a-8d depict the steps in a process for fabricating micromachined vapor filled glass and silicon cells according to one embodiment of the present invention.
a depicts a design of a physics package for an atomic clock according to one embodiment of the present invention.
b depicts the physics package for an atomic clock of
The present invention is directed to compact gas-filled cells. More particularly, the present invention relates to methods of fabricating compact hollow cells and filling the compact cells with alkali-atom vapor.
According to one embodiment of the present invention a process has been developed for fabricating small, sealed glass cells from hollow-core fibers. These cells can be filled with a vapor of alkali atoms, as well as a controlled environment such as a buffer gas. According to one fabrication process, light from a suitable laser such as a carbon-dioxide (CO2) laser at a wavelength of 10 μm is focused onto the tip of a hollow-core glass fiber. Energy from the laser is absorbed by the glass, melting it, and sealing the interior volume of the fiber in an airtight manner. Alkali atoms in a vacuum or a buffer-gas environment can be deposited into the fiber before sealing, confining the atoms/buffer gas in a controlled environment inside the walls of the fiber. In this way, compact cells containing a vapor of alkali atoms can be made. In addition to sealing the vapor cells, this fabrication method forms hemispherical glass beads at the ends of the fibers which can be used as lenses for efficiently coupling light into the fibers to probe the atoms such as indicated in
According to another embodiment of the present invention a process has been developed for fabricating small vapor filled glass and silicon cells are made using anodic bonding of glass and silicon (Si) wafers, in which elevated temperatures and applied high voltages are used to bond the two materials together. Alkali atoms can be introduced into the glass/Si cells in several ways such as: 1) direct injection of material; 2) a chemical reaction; and 3) deposition by an atomic beam. These processes can be performed in a controlled non-reactive environment such as an anaerobic chamber, or in a vacuum chamber. In addition to being compact, the glass/Si cells lend themselves easily to wafer-level assembly of physics packages for atomic frequency references.
According to the present invention vapor-filled cells with volumes much less that 1 cm3 can be fabricated and used to confine alkali atoms (and in come cases buffer gases) in miniature vapor cell atomic clocks or magnetometers.
a is a schematic of an alkali vapor cell fabricated from a hollow fiber by the laser heating method depicted in
During the course of the present invention it has been determined that the controlling the power level of the laser could mitigate two potential problems which might otherwise occur. If the power level is too low, a sort of “cusp” can be formed within hemispherical bead. This cusp can allow gas to pass between the outside and the inside of the fiber volume, preventing the seal from becoming airtight. If the power level is too high, gas bubbles can form inside the bead, which scatter light passing through the glass and reduce the effectiveness of the bead as a lens for coupling light into the fiber. It was determined that the formation of bubbles could be avoided by positioning the rotating fiber tip away from the beam waste of the laser, i.e. at angles greater that 90° as depicted in
As indicated above, alkali atoms and buffer gases as appropriate can be introduced into the cells in several ways. The atoms can be simply inserted through the open end of the fiber as shown in
The processes of the present invention can be used to create alkali vapor cells. For example, during the course of the present invention cells were fabricated and filled with alkali atoms as will now be described. First, one end of a 5 cm long Pyrex fiber was sealed with a CO2 laser using the process depicted in
A filling tube was attached to the cell preform by placing a second hollow-core fiber perpendicular to the first, with hole at the end of the second fiber coincident with the hole in the side wall of the first. The two fibers were then fused together by heating the junction between the two fibers with laser light while simultaneously rotating the two pieces together. The filling tube is then attached to a conventional cell-filling manifold and alkali metal can be distilled into the cell. The cell is thereafter back-filled with an appropriate pressure of buffer gas before the filling tube was sealed, creating an alkali metal vapor-filled cell.
According to another method of filling hollow core fiber cells with alkali metals according to the present invention, one end of the cell is first sealed using the process depicted in
The success of the sealing technique has been proven by the observation of optical and microwave resonances from atoms contained inside the cell.
The extreme miniaturization of cells fabricated according to the present invention allow for simplification of optical designs of compact frequency references or magnetometers. The processes described above have been used to produce cells with inside diameters about 1 mm, which is considerably smaller than can be achieved with conventional glass-blowing techniques. The fabrication of even smaller cell structures, with diameters well below 1 mm, is feasible using the methods of the present invention.
According to another embodiment of the present invention small vapor filled glass and silicon cells are fabricated by anodically bonding of silicon and Pyrex or (or another material) in the structure of wafers using high voltage applied at elevated temperatures.
Anodic bonding is an established and well-known process in silicon micromachining that has been used to make micro-sensors such as airbag accelerometers. According to the present invention holes 20 are created in a silicon wafer 21 that has both sides polished as shown in
After formation of the holes 20, a thin Pyrex wafer (or other window materials that is at least semitransparent) 22 is anodically bonded to one side of the silicon wafer 21 creating a cell preform which is open at one end as shown in
In the fabrication step depicted in
After the preform is filled with an alkali metal (and optional buffer gas), the final step in the cell fabrication process which is depicted in
Introducing the alkali metal into the cell can be accomplished in several ways, two of which are described in the examples below. In the first process, the preform is placed in a commercially available anaerobic chamber containing a gas or gases that do not react with alkali metals such as dry nitrogen, Ar, Ne, etc. Trace amounts of oxygen inside the chamber are removed via catalytic reactions with an anaerobic gas mixture and a catalyst (palladium). The catalytic reactions reduce the oxygen to form water vapor, which is then absorbed by the system's drying system. This method of producing a controlled, oxygen- and water-free environment is well-documented and highly developed. Within the anaerobic chamber, a micropipette is used to dispense liquid cesium into the holes of the perform which serve as reservoirs. The preform is then placed inside a vacuum chamber containing the anodic bonding apparatus. The vacuum chamber is evacuated, back-filled with a buffer gas at a desired pressure and the second Pyrex wafer is then bonded onto the top of the preform using anodic bonding, sealing the alkali metal (Cs or Rb) and buffer gas inside the cell. Cs and Rb can be identified as shiny, metallic-looking particles inside the cell. The entire cell fabrication, filling and sealing process can be performed in a rapid and repeatable manner.
The above-described process was used to fabricate a Cs filled cell in which the presence of atomic Cs was confirmed together with the approximate pressure of the appropriate buffer gas by optical absorption measurement. The broadening of the optical absorption spectrum of a cell fabricated using a similar procedure is shown in
The anodic bonding method can be used in conjunction with another filling process for making alkali atom cells. This alternative process involves the reaction:
Ba2N6+2(Alkali)Cl→2BaCl+3N2+2(Alkali),
where Alkali represents and alkali element such as Cs or Rb.
In one experimental example conducted during the course of the present invention the salt CsCl is added to a 15% solution of Ba2N6 in H2O. This mixture was introduced into a cell preform and baked in air to evaporate the water. When the residue (CsCl+Ba2N6) was heated under vacuum to roughly 120° C., the Ba2N6 decomposed into elemental Ba and N2 gas. At a somewhat higher temperature (near 200° C.), the Ba reacted with the CsCl to produce BaCl and elemental Cs. The N2 released can in principle serve as a buffer gas in the final cell. However, a large amount of the gas is created relative to the amount of Cs and if the N2 pressure in the final cell is too high (above a few tens of kPa), the optical transitions in the Cs atoms are overly broadened and the cell becomes hard to use in clock applications.
In order to control the amount of N2 in the final cell the Ba2N6 was reacted before the final cell window was bonded. After filling the preform with the Ba2N6+CsCl mixture and drying, the preform was placed in an ultra-high vacuum (UHV) system, which was then evacuated. The preform was heated to 150° C. and left for at least 60 minutes to allow the Ba2N6 to decompose and most of the N2 to disperse. The Pyrex wafer was then pushed up against the preform top within the vacuum system and the bonding voltage was applied. The temperature was then increased slowly to allow the anodic bonding to happen before the CsCl is reduced so that the final Cs product is contained inside the cell. It was determined that if the bonding does not occur at a low enough temperature, any Cs can escape from the cell or be internally reacted to a non-useful compound.
After removal from the vacuum system, an optical absorption resonance was measured by passing light from a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser through cell and scanning the laser wavelength over the Cs absorption line. This absorption spectrum is shown in
Another method of filling cells with alkali metal involves the use of a beam of alkali atoms formed using an alkali oven and collimation apertures. Such a beam in a UHV environment can be used to deposit an alkali metal film directly inside a preform, and the chamber could then be backfilled with a buffer gas. The cells would be sealed in the same manner as in the previous filling methods, using a second glass wafer and anodic bonding. This method has the advantage that all the alkali-metal handling is done inside a UHV system, and cleaner and higher-purity alkali metal could be obtained.
Cells fabricated from silicon wafers as described above can be easily integrated into physics packages for compact atomic clocks. One such design is exemplified in
The physics package depicted in
By using silicon micromachining technologies according to the present invention the vapor filled cells can be batch fabricated at lower costs and in smaller sizes. Since the processes of the present invention use of the same manufacturing platform as microelectronics and MEMS it is possible to integrate the vapor filled cells in substrates together with control electronics and sensors
The entire fabrication-filling-sealing process can in principle be performed at the wafer level and at low costs. Silicon etching and anodic bonding have already been demonstrated in industry at the wafer level. Cell filling can be performed at the wafer level with either of the filling techniques described in above. For the anaerobic chamber technique, micropipettes are commercially available with manifolds containing arrays of pipette tips which allow simultaneously filling an array of cell preforms in one dispensing action. For the chemical reaction technique, an appropriate concentration of the Ba2N6(Alkali)Cl mixture could be used to fill all wafer level preforms, with the drying, heating and bonding performed subsequently for all cells. For atomic beam deposition of alkali metal, a large-diameter atomic beam could be used to fill all cells on a wafer simultaneously. Thermal control of the cell preform during the filling process maybe required.
The use of catalytic reactions to achieve a controlled oxygen free environment has been used broadly in industrial applications for about two decades and is relatively low-cost as compared to using UHV. All materials used to fabricate the vapor cells according to the present invention are readily commercially available.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to particular means, materials and embodiments, from the foregoing description, one skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of the present invention and various changes and modifications can be made to adapt the various uses and characteristics without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as described above.
The present application is based upon U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/461,692, filed Apr. 9, 2003 to which priority is claimed under 35 U.S.C. §120.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60461692 | Apr 2003 | US |