† Corresponding author. E-mail:
Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 11704408 and 91836106), the Beijing Natural Science Foundation, China (Grant No. Z180013), and the Joint Fund of the Ministry of Education, China (Grant No. 6141A020333xx).
We develop a high-performance ultraviolet (UV) frequency stabilization technique implemented directly on UV diode lasers by combining the dichroic atomic vapor laser lock and the resonant transfer cavity lock. As an example, we demonstrate a stable locking with measured frequency standard deviations of approximately 200 kHz and 300 kHz for 399 nm and 370 nm diode lasers in 20 min. We achieve a long-term frequency drift of no more than 1 MHz for the target 370 nm laser within an hour, which is further verified with fluorescence count rates of a single trapped 171Yb+ ion. We also find strong linear correlations between lock points and environmental factors such as temperature and atmospheric pressure. Our approach provides a simple and stable solution at a relatively low cost, and features flexible control, high feedback bandwidth and minimal power consumption of the target UV laser.
Ultraviolet (UV) lasers are increasingly used in numerous photonics applications in research and industry, including quantum information processing, atomic frequency standards, photoemission spectroscopy, and laser photolithography. Some applications have very stringent requirements for central frequencies of lasers, e.g., the experiments related to cold atoms or trapped ions.[1–3] Recently, several conventional UV laser diodes and their counterpart external cavity grating feedback diode lasers (ECDLs) have become widely available. They are more compact and lightweight, more energy-efficient, require less maintenance, and cost much lower than traditional frequency-doubling UV lasers. However, since UV-coated optical devices are relatively inefficient and easily damaged, the frequency stabilization for UV diode lasers is usually more difficult than traditional UV lasers, for which the frequency stabilization can actually appear in the visible or near-infrared (NIR) spectral region by using excess longer wavelength lasers.
In general, a laser frequency stabilization system should at least consist of an absolute frequency reference and a frequency locking component. Commonly used absolute frequency references include absorption lines, other stable lasers and Fabry-Pérot (FP) cavities, especially high-finesse cavities made of ultra-low thermal expansion (ULE) materials and installed in specially designed stable vacuum housings. The corresponding frequency locking schemes include the saturation absorption dither locking (SADL),[4–9] polarization spectroscopy (PS),[10–13] the modulation transfer spectroscopy (MTS),[14–19] the dichroic atomic vapor laser lock (DAVLL),[20–22] the Pound–Drever–Hall (PDH) technique,[23] the scanning transfer cavity lock (STCL),[24–27] the offset sideband lock,[28,29] the injection and phase locked loop lock, etc.[30] However, the widely used rich absorption lines of Rb or iodine,[31] as well as the frequency-shifting fiber electro-optic modulator (EOM) with a wide tuning range, are generally unavailable in the UV spectral region. It is also usually difficult to coat a transfer FP cavity in the operating wavelength range from UV to NIR. Therefore, for UV diode lasers with relatively limited output power, the best practice should be a UV absorption line scheme, but this will only apply if the target lock point is fortunately located near a strong absorption line.
In order to overcome these limitations, we develop a high-performance frequency stabilization technique that combines the DAVLL and the resonant transfer cavity lock. The new approach needs an auxiliary UV laser with less strict central frequency requirement. We first lock the auxiliary laser to a strong absorption spectral line using the DAVLL method, then the frequency lock is passed to the target UV laser through the resonant transfer cavity. The lock point of the target UV laser can be fine tuned by adjusting the lock point of the DAVLL in a huge real-time frequency tuning range up to GHz, which can cover the whole free spectral range (FSR) of conventional FP cavities. All frequency locking and shifting functions, including automatic lock-point finding and automatic two-way top-of-fringe transfer lock, are implemented by digital signal processing algorithms[32,33] based on field-programmable gate array (FPGA) technology. We build and test this approach in a trapped ion experiment. The main apparatus is a Yb hollow-cathode lamp (HCL) for the DAVLL and a conventional FP cavity for the resonant transfer cavity lock. By analyzing and cancelling laser power and polarization jittering, we achieve frequency standard deviations of 202 kHz and 309 kHz for the auxiliary 399 nm laser and the target 370 nm laser, respectively. Furthermore, we analyze the relationship between lock points and environmental parameters, e.g., temperature and atmospheric pressure, and find strong linear correlations that can be reasonably explained. Finally, we achieve a long-term frequency drift of no more than 1 MHz for the 370 nm laser and verify it by recording and analyzing fluorescence counts rate of a single trapped 171Yb+ ion.
The entire experimental system is placed in a closed box as schematically shown in Fig.
The analog voltage signals of PDs are converted to digital signals through an eight-channel 16-bit analog-to-digital converter (ADC, AD7606). These signals undergo a series of digital signal processing, then convert into feedback voltages by two two-channel 16-bit digital-to-analog converters (DAC, DAC8563), and finally output to the piezoelectric ceramics of the laser or the FP cavity to implement the stabilization of frequency or cavity length. Digital signal processing algorithms including digital signal synthesizers, digital lock-in amplifiers, digital low-pass filters, and digital proportional-integral-derivative (PID) controllers, are implemented through FPGA (Spartan 6 XC6SLX9, 100 MHz clock) programming on a low-cost Mojo V3 development board. All the hardware modules, including the transfer function generator for testing purpose, are wrapped into standard trigger-driven input/output interfaces. All the logical connections can be reconfigured on the fly from our PC program, which can also communicate with the FPGA and automatically find the lock point. We only need to adjust some parameters on the computer via a user-friendly interface and confirm the position of the lock point to complete the entire frequency stabilization process. The overall feedback bandwidth is around 100 kHz mainly limited by the maximum sampling speed of the ADC.
This all-digital design greatly simplifies the topology of connection wires, reduces the impact of noise during signal processing and improves robustness. The algorithms and parameters can be simulated, tested and tuned with standard FPGA simulation technology. As we will explain later, it enables us to replace the traditional expensive balanced photodetector with a pair of UV-optimized single detectors, which have higher quantum efficiencies and eliminate common mode laser amplitude noise. Except for the commercial FP cavity, the total cost of our solution is less than 1000 dollars and does not require any special modulation functionality of the laser.
The DAVLL method subtracts the absorption signals of Zeeman level transitions as the frequency discriminator error signal, and consumes much less laser power than other pump-based spectroscopy methods. We choose a low-cost HCL (model Yb HL-1) with an operating voltage of approximately 132 V and an operating current of approximately 5 mA. We use its absorption line near 398.9 nm as the absolute frequency reference. Using HCL instead of evacuated heat pipe or vacuum chamber makes the apparatus much simpler, and potentially enables self-test for the target 370 nm laser since the HCL has both atoms and ions inside. The single beam nature of the DAVLL method also allows us to use conventional cylindrical HCLs instead of expensive opto-galvanic models.
As shown in Fig.
However, this original error signal of the DAVLL method may be affected by beam power, polarization and optical path jitter. Therefore, we use polarization-maintaining fibers instead of free space to conduct the laser beam to the HCL in the closed box, and use (VADC2 – VADC3) / (VADC2 + VADC3 – V0) instead of VADC2 – VADC3 as the error signal to eliminate the jitter of optical power, where V0 is the sum of the PDs’ dark voltages. This normalized error signal is processed by the PID controller and converted to voltage by the DAC, and then fed back to the piezoelectric ceramics of the 399 nm laser to compensate fluctuations in laser frequency.
With this setup, the measured frequency jitter of the locked 399 nm laser is limited within 1 MHz (–0.7 MHz to 0.3 MHz) in 20 min, and the standard deviation is 202 kHz, which is close to the instantaneous linewidth of the diode laser, as shown in the left panel of Fig.
The resonant transfer cavity lock scheme is implemented by first locking the FP cavity length to the stabilized 399 nm laser and then locking the 370 nm laser to the FP cavity length. For both the cases we use the simple top-of-fringe method instead of the PDH method and obtain the derivative of the transmitted peak signal by modulating the phase of the laser. The slope-shape demodulated differential signal holds an approximate linear dependence on the incident laser frequency or the cavity length over the entire peak range, hence can be used as the error signal, as shown in Fig.
After the frequency stabilization of the 399 nm laser is achieved, we first scan the length of the FP cavity to a frequency scanning range equal to the FSR of 1.5 GHz, and find a single transmitted peak signal. A current modulation of 5 kHz and 0.05 mA is applied to the 399 nm laser, and the demodulated slope-shape error signal is fed back to the length of the FP cavity through a PID controller. After the cavity length is stabilized, we scan the piezo voltage offset of the 370 nm laser to find its transmitted peak that resonates with the cavity length. The same current modulation is also applied to the 370 nm laser and the demodulated slope-shape error signal is fed back to the piezo voltage offset of the 370 nm laser through another PID controller. By adjusting the lock point wavelength of the 399 nm laser to 398.911691 nm, the 370 nm laser is transfer locked at 369.526275 nm, which is the optimal Doppler cooling frequency for our trapped 171Yb+ ion setup.
The performance of the transfer cavity is characterized by monitoring frequency ratio between the 399 nm and 370 nm lasers. The frequency ratio is very stable for a time period less than 10 min, as shown in the left panel of Fig.
With stabilized temperature and atmospheric pressure, we can finally stabilize the target 370 nm laser in a relatively long time scale. In Fig.
The slope of the fluorescence count rates with respect to detuning frequency around the lock point, 1.2 kHz/MHz, can also be used to convert the fluctuation of the fluorescence count rates into the 370 nm laser frequency fluctuation. A rough estimation of the frequency stability of the frequency-stabilized 370 nm laser is made by this calibration. The true stability, however, should be obtained from a beat frequency measurement between two identical systems. To characterize the time domain behavior of our frequency-stabilized 370 nm laser, we collect a 3-hour data and calculate the Allan deviation σy(τ) of the frequency fluctuation either measured by the wavelength meter or calibrated from the fluorescence count rates as a function of the average time τ, as shown in Fig.
In summary, we have demonstrated a high-performance laser frequency stabilization technique implemented directly on UV diode lasers, by combining the dichroic atomic vapor laser lock and the resonant transfer cavity lock. The target UV laser can be locked tightly at any central frequency by adjusting the lock point of the auxiliary laser in a GHz huge real-time frequency tuning range. Our approach provides a simple and stable solution at a relatively low cost, and features flexible control, high feedback bandwidth and minimal power consumption of the target UV laser.
Although this is a general technique, it is particularly suitable for trapped ion quantum experiments, in which the cooling laser is the target UV laser and the ionization laser is the auxiliary laser. In these experiments, the cooling laser usually has shorter wavelengths, lower available power, and is divided into several parts for state initialization and state detection as well with different modulations. The ionization laser usually has longer wavelength, higher available power, and becomes idle once ions are loaded. Therefore, a fraction of its power can be shared and its frequency can be adjusted to assist the stabilization of the cooling laser at the ion manipulation stage. In fact, since we use the spectroscopy of the same atomic species as the trapped ions, the lock point of the ionization laser is close to the optimal ionization frequency near the atomic resonance. Due to the broadening of laser power and atomic beam velocity distribution, we have successfully reloaded and cooled ions during experiments without unlocking. By selecting hollow-cathode lamps with corresponding element materials, our method can be extended to trapped ion experiments with other elements such as Ca and Ba, and will be more widely used with the improvement of ultraviolet laser diode technology.
The short-term stability of our method can be further improved by replacing the laser current modulation with an EOM. To improve the long-term stability of the transfer lock, the FP cavity can be placed in a vacuum housing with temperature control. If the required lock point of the auxiliary laser for the transfer lock is fortunately near the atomic resonance, or if there is a resonant UV EOM with a design frequency close to the required frequency shift, the tuning range requirement can be much lower. Then the DAVLL method can be replaced with the SADL or MTS method by locking at the Zeeman levels. By using a solenoid to adjust the strength of the magnetic field, the Zeeman lock point can be continuously adjusted in the range of hundreds of MHz.[16] In this way, we will eliminate potential long-term drift caused by laser power and polarization fluctuations, thereby obtaining a more clearly defined absolute reference frequency.
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