.
Center for Biomolecular Science & Engineering: Promoting discovery and invention in the post-genomic age
Baskin School of Engineering
UCSC Home
Home People Research News & Events Academics Outreach Jobs
  You Are Here: Home > News > UCSC researchers achieve atomic spectroscopy on a chip

NEWS & EVENTS
Top News Stories
News Archives
Events
For Journalists
CBSE in the News
RECENT HEADLINES

UC Santa Cruz awarded $7.2 million grant for stem cell research center

Feldheim research shows nature and nurture combine to form the right visual connections

William Scott’s hammerhead ribozyme makes the cover of Chemistry & Biology

Inspiration, determination lead to success for undergraduate biology major Shewit Tekeste

Bioelectronics engineer Wentai Liu designs prostheses to change lives

David Haussler honored by International Society for Computational Biology

Optical tweezers pick up the ribosome beat

Anthropologists confirm link between diet and teeth of chimpanzees and orangutans

National engineering honor society installs chapter at UC Santa Cruz

Spotlight on UCSC stem cell scholar Courtney Onodera

 
 
 
 
 


  CBSE NEWS

.

UCSC researchers achieve atomic spectroscopy on a chip

Monday, June 4, 2007
Written by Tim Stephens


Atomic spectroscopy on a chip was achieved using this device, which features interconnected waveguides, rubidium vapor cells, and fiber-optical access.
Source: Holger Schmidt

Researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, have performed atomic spectroscopy with integrated optics on a chip for the first time, guiding a beam of light through a rubidium vapor cell integrated into a semiconductor chip.

Atomic spectroscopy is a widely used technique with diverse applications. Based on the interactions of light and matter, spectroscopy is often used to identify substances by the wavelengths of light they absorb or emit. Conventional systems have many large components, whereas the compact, fully planar device developed at UCSC enables the study of atoms and molecules on a chip-based platform with integrated optics, said Holger Schmidt, associate professor of electrical engineering.

Schmidt's group and his collaborators at Brigham Young University described the first monolithically integrated, planar rubidium cell on a chip in a paper published in the June issue of Nature Photonics. The first author of the paper is Wenge Yang, a postdoctoral researcher in Schmidt's lab at UCSC's Baskin School of Engineering.

According to Schmidt, potential applications for this technology include frequency stabilization for lasers, gas detection sensors, and quantum information processing.

"To stabilize lasers, people use precision spectroscopy with bulk rubidium vapor cells. We could build a little integrated frequency stabilization chip that would do that more easily than a conventional frequency stabilization circuit," Schmidt said.

That project is already under way in Schmidt's lab. Other applications, such as quantum information processing, are more long-term goals, he said.

The key to the group's achievement is their development of hollow-core optical waveguides based on antiresonant reflecting optical waveguide (ARROW) principles. In previous publications, Schmidt and his collaborators have described other uses of ARROW waveguides integrated into chips using standard silicon fabrication technology (see earlier press release).

To perform atomic spectroscopy, the researchers incorporated rubidium reservoirs into a chip, connecting the reservoirs to hollow-core waveguides so that the optical beam path is filled with rubidium atoms. The resulting vapor cell is completely self-contained and has an active cell volume about 80 million times smaller than a conventional cell, Schmidt said.

"We used rubidium as a proof of principle, but this technique is applicable to any gaseous medium. So it has potentially far-reaching implications," Schmidt said.

In addition to its use in laser frequency stabilization, rubidium vapor is widely used in quantum optics experiments and has been used to slow the speed of light.

"Fundamental concepts in quantum information processing have been demonstrated in principle using bulk rubidium systems. To be practical you can't have big optical tables in all the places you would want to use it, but now we can make this technology more compact and portable," Schmidt said.

In addition to Schmidt, the coauthors of the Nature Photonics article include Donald Conkey and Aaron Hawkins of Brigham Young University, as well as UCSC graduate student Bin Wu and postdoctoral researcher Dongliang Yin. This research was supported by the National Science Foundation and the Slow Light Program of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

UCSC Home

© January 2005,
CBSE

Updated 5/2008