| Literature DB >> 28646176 |
Steinn Agustsson1, Giovanni Bianchi1, Roberto Calabrese2, Lorenzo Corradi3, Antonio Dainelli3, Alen Khanbekyan1,2, Carmela Marinelli1, Emilio Mariotti4, Luca Marmugi5, Leonardo Ricci6, Leonardo Stiaccini1, Luca Tomassetti7, Andrea Vanella1.
Abstract
Controlled atomic desorption from organic Poly-DiMethylSiloxane coating is demonstrated for improving the loading efficiency of 209,210Fr magneto-optical traps. A three times increase in the cold atoms population is obtained with contact-less pulsed light-induced desorption, applied to different isotopes, either bosonic or fermionic, of Francium. A six times increase of 210Fr population is obtained with a desorption mechanism based on direct charge transfer from a triboelectric probe to the adatom-organic coating complex. Our findings provide new insight on the microscopic mechanisms of atomic desorption from organic coatings. Our results, obtained at room temperature so as to preserve ideal vacuum conditions, represent concrete alternatives, independent from the atomic species in use, for high-efficiency laser cooling in critical conditions.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28646176 PMCID: PMC5482838 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-04397-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Atomic desorption processes for laser cooling of Francium isotopes. (a) Interplay between the source of Fr, the vapour phase, the MOT population and the main sources of loss of atomic population. Adsorption can be effectively contrasted by controlled desorption mechanisms, as discussed in the main text. (b) Normal operation loading of the Fr MOT. (c) Loading of the Fr MOT with pulsed photodesorption of atoms embedded in the PDMS coating. (d) Loading of the Fr MOT with charge transfer-induced atomic desorption. Sketches are not to scale and are shown for illustrative purposes only.
Figure 2Pulsed LIAD of 210Fr from PDMS. Left: 210Fr MOT population time evolution after a broadband light pulse at t = 0 s. Right: Subsequent desorption events produced by repeated flashes exhibit similar characteristics. Arrows mark the timestamp of the flash. Horizontal dashed lines indicate the equilibrium population.
Figure 3Pulsed LIAD of 209Fr from PDMS. 209Fr MOT population time evolution after a broadband light pulse at t = 0 s. The vertical arrow marks the beginning of LIAD. The horizontal dashed line indicates the equilibrium MOT population.
Figure 4Charge transfer-induced desorption of 210Fr from PDMS. 210Fr MOT population after local charge transfer from a dielectric probe at t = 0. The horizontal dashed line indicates the MOT equilibrium population. Inset: Relative variation of the 210Fr MOT population Δ (Equation 1) in the same experiment, with a second application at t = 161 s of the charge transfer from the dielectric probe. Continuous and dashed curves correspond to the best exponential fits of experimental data.