Contaminant-free end-capped and single-mode acetylene photonic microcell for sub-Doppler spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Thomas Billotte,
Matthieu Chafer,
Martin Maurel,
Foued Amrani,
Frédéric Gérôme,
Benoît Debord,
Fetah Benabid
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
optics letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.524
H-Index - 272
eISSN - 1071-2763
pISSN - 0146-9592
DOI - 10.1364/ol.412507
Subject(s) - microcell , optics , doppler effect , materials science , spectroscopy , acetylene , photonics , optoelectronics , physics , telecommunications , chemistry , computer science , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , astronomy
We report on the development of an acetylene-filled photonic microcell based on an assembly process that is contaminant free and requires no helium buffer gas nor gluing procedure. The microcell consists of a 7-m-long and 30 µm core-diameter inhibited-coupling guiding hollow-core photonic crystal fiber filled with acetylene gas at a pressure in the range of 80 µbar, sealed by capping its ends with fusion-collapsing a glass-tube sleeve, and mounted on FC connectors for integration. The microcell shows a robust single-mode behavior and a total insertion loss of ∼1.5 d B . The spectroscopic merit of the formed microcell is tested by generating electromagnetic induced transparency and saturated absorption on R13 and P9 absorption lines, respectively. The sub-Doppler transparencies show a close to transit time limited linewidth of 17±3 M H z . The latter was monitored for over 3 months. As a demonstration, the microcell was used to frequency stabilize a laser with fractional frequency instability improvement by a factor 50 at 100 s integration time compared to free running laser operation.
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