1. Introduction
Sensitive magnetic-field measurements are critical for many applications in science, national security, industry, and medical diagnostics. Superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) have been traditionally used in sensitive applications at low frequency, for example, in magneto-encephalography (MEG), but they require a cryogenic infrastructure. Atomic magnetometers (AMs) operating in the spin-exchange-relaxation-free (SERF) regime have demonstrated similar sensitivity to SQUIDs [
1,
2] and are a promising cryogen-free alternative to SQUIDs for many applications, such as MEG [
3,
4,
5,
6,
7], magneto-cardiography (MCG) [
8,
9], ultra-low-field NMR [
10,
11,
12], and MRI [
13,
14].
The first SERF magnetometers were bulky and expensive, requiring set up on an optical table [
15]. Recently, however, SERF and other sensitive atomic magnetometers have been developed that are compact, flexible, and inexpensive to assemble, especially those based on a fiber-coupled (FC) design with small cells [
4,
5,
16] or a microfabrication design [
6]. Atomic magnetometers of the FC design have sufficiently matured for commercialization [
16]. One driving force for the development has been MEG, with MEG recordings already demonstrated by several groups [
4,
5,
6].
Many FC AMs have demonstrated similar sensitivities but have many different features with advantages and disadvantages important to consider in applications: the number and types of lasers, optical configurations, the size of the cell, the minimal stand-off distance, the cell composition, the temperature of operation, demonstrated and potential sensitivities, bandwidth, tunability, and operation with or without field modulation. Shah and Wakai [
5] presented MEG and MCG recordings with an FC AM of 10 fT/Hz
1/2 sensitivity containing a 4-mm
87Rb Pyrex cell. The AM has a single beam configuration, with a magnetic field modulated at a kHz frequency to enable field sensitivity along the axis perpendicular to the beam direction and suppress 1/f noise. The cell was heated to 150 °C via light from a fiber-coupled laser diode. This heating method has been developed for small cells (4 mm). The laser power required increases linearly with the surface area or quadratically with the size of the cell; for large cells, there could be a problem due to the burning of the fiber attached to the cell. Johnson et al. [
4] presented MEG recordings with a two-color collinear beam SERF using the D2 line to probe and the D1 to pump the 1 × 1 × 5 cm
3 87Rb cell filled with 50 Torr of N
2 and 760 Torr of He. The cell was electrically heated with a 20 kHz ac current to temperatures of 140–180 °C. A modulated field at 1 kHz was also used to select the field sensitivity axis and reduce 1/f noise. A sensitivity of 5 fT/Hz
1/2 was achieved. There are also demonstrations of sensitive operation with micro-fabricated AMs. When external lasers in orthogonal configurations were used with a micro-fabricated cell, a sensitivity of 5 fT/Hz
1/2 was achieved by heating the Rb cell to 200 °C via passing an electric current through two indium-tin-oxide (ITO) windows [
17]. While this result is quite impressive, several drawbacks are present: the temperature is very high, which can lead to faster cell deterioration; the operation has a 50% duty cycle due to the need to turn off the heating current during measurements; and the noise from Rb, the ITO film, and the heater connections are significant, limiting the potential for sensitivity improvement.
3. Results
It is anticipated that the AM of this design can work in a wide range of frequencies with an appropriate tuning of the bias field. At very high frequencies of 23 kHz and 40 kHz, we have already shown that the AM of this design can reach 5 fT/Hz
1/2 and 4 fT/Hz
1/2 sensitivity [
21]. Sensitivity is expected to be of a similar order even at much higher frequencies, since the width of the resonance curve does not depend much on the bias field after 40 kHz, but the noise in general is saturated by photon shot noise. However, it is not at all obvious that the AM can perform well at very low frequencies or between dc and 23 kHz. One problem with low frequency operation is that laser technical noise is much higher, especially due to the fibers used to deliver the light to the cell and feedback from the reflections. Technical noise of both the probe and pump lasers is important. While the optical rotation increases due to a smaller bandwidth, the signal-to-noise ratio depends on the ratio of the gain in the signal and the increase in the noise. The gain in the signal is expected to be about 16 from the ratio of magnetic resonance width (current measurement at low frequency gave half-width half-maximum (HWHM) of 18 Hz, while previously at high frequency, the width was 287 Hz). The increase of laser technical noise is anticipated inversely with the frequency (1/f noise), which starts to dominate photon shot noise below a few kHz. Thus by conducting measurements at very low frequencies, we can interpolate sensitivity in a large range of frequencies. We know that the SERF regime by definition is when the spin-exchange broadening can be neglected; hence, the magnetic resonance width is minimal. The increase in the width with the bias field is a well-known phenomenon and has been studied previously (see, for example, [
15]). The spin-exchange broadening becomes significant at the bias fields corresponding to a few hundred Hz.
To test the AM noise at low frequency, the AM sensor head containing the cell was inserted into a cylindrical ferrite shield with end caps, which was placed inside a cylindrical mu-metal can. The magnetic noise suppression was on the order of 5000. The gradients and residual fields from the ferrite shield, which was in close proximity to the AM cell, were removed with a coil system wound on a cylindrical surface positioned inside the ferrite shield. Three orthogonal fields were generated with a solenoid and two orthogonal cosine coils; five independent first-order gradients, necessary at a low field to reduce the dominant gradients, were produced with a gradient coil system. The fields and gradients needed to maximize the AM signal were determined by scanning them using a Labview program.
The PM fibers were 5 m long in anticipation of applications outside the laboratory which would benefit from this distance from the electronics because of the reduction of noise and field distortions. Unfortunately, the longer fibers made the fiber-coupled DFB lasers, which did not have optical isolators, unstable. This caused the broadening of magnetic resonances due to light shifts arising from the circularly polarized pump beam. To improve stability, we increased the laser current and added an attenuator to reduce feedback from the long fiber, after which hop-free operation was restored.
The noise spectrum data were taken when the AM cell was heated to a temperature corresponding to Rb density of
= 7.4 × 10
12 cm
−3 as estimated from the probe beam absorption measurement [
21]. The rotation of the polarization of the probe light, which is proportional to signal of the AM, is:
where
is the dispersion Lorentzian with HWHM
,
is the laser frequency, and
is frequency of the center of absorption of the
D1 line;
is the optical pathlength,
is the classical electron radius,
is the speed of light,
is the Rb
D1 oscillator strength of D1 line of Rb, and
is the y projection of Rb polarization.
In the sensitivity demonstration for the dc-160 Hz range, the AM was tuned to the maximum response at 50 Hz with a
bias field of 7.1 nT. The AM frequency response, obtained by applying a weak sinusoidal field whose frequency was changed in steps, was recorded and fitted with a Lorentzian plus a background line (
Figure 2a):
The line accounts for the contribution from the second peak at negative
frequency [
22,
23,
24] when the oscillating field rather than rotating field is applied. In-phase and out-of-phase components need to be considered; moreover, the magnetic field gradients and light-shift gradients can lead to deviation from the simple two-peak model, but these and many other effects, such as slow drifts in laser power and the AM signal, can still be approximated for our given resonance frequency, width, and range of frequencies at which the fitting was performed with a line:
. The HWHM Γ was found to be 18 ± 1 Hz, which is reasonable for the given Rb AM parameters. The width depends on bulk and wall collisions, the probe, pump spin-destruction, light shifts, and dephasing due to field non-uniformity, which was minimized by adjusting the first-order gradients. The theoretical estimate of Γ from Rb-Rb, Rb-N
2, and the diffusion to the wall spin-destruction collisions is 8.3 Hz. Normally, the optimal pump rate in the SERF regime is equal to the spin-destruction rate, so the width is expected to be ~16.6 Hz, in agreement with the experiment. Further investigation on the optimal pumping rate at different bias fields will be given later.
The magnetic field sensitivity, which was rescaled by dividing the AM output noise spectrum by the AM frequency response, is presented in
Figure 2b. The best sensitivity of 5 fT/Hz
1/2 was achieved at 50 Hz, while a sensitivity greater than 10 fT/Hz
1/2 was achieved in a frequency range from 15 to 150 Hz without an additional bias field tuning or a pumping rate adjustment of interest to MEG and MCG applications. It is possible to adjust the bias field to achieve high sensitivity in a much wider frequency range for applications such as ultra-low field NMR [
10,
11,
12] and radio communication, including underground communication wherein there are limitations due to skin-depth penetration. In order to investigate the sensitivity in a wider range, we developed a model for the magnetic resonance width. This model is the further refinement on a vector model presented in [
25], in which the total angular momenta
and
of lower and upper hyperfine manifolds precess in opposite directions in the magnetic field with equal angular velocity. Thus, the angle between the initial orientation and the orientation at time
t for each component is
. The precession frequency
for each component is the precession frequency of the free electron divided by 2
I + 1, the slowing down factor due to the presence of nuclear spin. When a spin-exchange SE collision takes place, the angular momenta are realigned and the relative change in the length of the sum of angular momenta
of the two components can be found geometrically:
Here
. For a small
, that is when the SE collision rate is higher than the precession frequency, the change in the angular momentum is close to zero, so no significant relaxation is taking place due to SE collisions—the SERF regime. The expansion for small angles
proportional to the ratio of the field to the SE rate leads to a quadratic dependence on the field, which is well known for a small polarization case [
15]. For a large
, it is important to introduce statistical averaging, since the collision time is not a fixed value but a random function:
Here,
is the rate of spin-exchange alignment of the total angular momenta of colliding atoms [
25] (parallel directions of F
1 and F
2 after collisions), which is somewhat different from the SE rate
defined as the rate of reversal of electron spins. In spin-temperature approximation, the expression
for I = 3/2,
for I = 5/2, or
for I = 7/2 [
25] is a function of polarization
, so Equation (4) is a function of polarization, too:
Here, we consider in detail the case of I = 3/2; however, in the following equations,
can be replaced with expressions for other nuclear spins. From the comparison with the analytical model Equation (99) in [
26], we find that
. Furthermore, the accuracy of the model can be improved by multiplying it by a factor of 0.8 to make it closely agree with the analytical expression for zero polarization Equation (99) in [
26] as illustrated in (
Figure 3a):
This analytical expression can be rewritten in terms of atomic magnetometer parameters and spin-destruction terms can be added to obtain the total broadening to compare with experiment:
where
is the pumping rate,
is the spin-destruction rate,
q is the slowing down factor, equal to 4 at high-field or high-polarization limits and to 6 at zero polarization,
, and
is the experimental Larmor frequency in Hz related to the bias field 2.8 B/q·MHz/G. The slowdown factor was used in [
15] to relate the spin-destruction rate
due to atomic collisions to the observed HWHM SERF resonance in Hz:
. The slowing down effect is implicitly included into the SE term in Equation (7), but the spin-destruction and pumping broadening terms contain it explicitly. For arbitrary polarization, the slowdown factor is given analytically in [
25] for the range of fields
, which is sufficient for our specific conditions. Beyond this range, the slowing down factor is close to 4. The comparison of vector-statistical model in the form of Equation (7) (units of
are replaced with units of bias field according to
2.8 B/q·MHz/G) with the experimental data [
25] in
Figure 3b for different bias fields and polarizations shows excellent agreement, further validating our model. With the help of this model, we find the width of the resonance curve as a function of the pumping rate and the bias field and optimize the pumping rate to obtain the maximum response
for a given bias field. We tune the bias field so that the AM exhibits the resonance at a given frequency, in contrast to the case of
Figure 2, where a single bias field was used corresponding to a 50 Hz resonance frequency.
Figure 4a shows the optimal pumping rate for different frequencies;
Figure 4b shows the corresponding bandwidth of the magnetometer when the pumping rate is optimized;
Figure 4c shows the corresponding sensitivity coefficient that the dominant optical probe noise needs to be multiplied by to obtain the expected sensitivity at different frequencies for an experimental noise level (
Figure 4d).
Figure 4d illustrates the sensitivity in 0–400 Hz; beyond this range, the sensitivity coefficient gradually increases by 20%, reaching a plateau at 2 kHz. We expect a sensitivity of 10 fT/Hz
1/2 or better, if noise falls off, since laser technical noise gradually decreases to the level of shot noise. In our previous work, we indeed observed 5 fT/Hz
1/2 at 10 kHz, which is consistent with the current extrapolation if we also take the threefold higher density of vapor in [
21] into account, and the scaling of the signal as square root of density when spin-destruction is not dominated by Rb-Rb collisions. Unfortunately, raising the temperature can lead to the burning of the cement and the fiber, so we used the temperature at which the magnetometer can work for a very long time. Further improvement in laser heating design can lead to a higher temperature of the cell and better sensitivity. We assumed throughout that the spin-exchange rate is 7760
, which corresponds to the Rb density 7.4 × 10
12 cm
−3 for the SE cross-section of 1.8 × 10
−14 cm
2. The theoretical spin destruction rate was also calculated from the Rb-Rb and Rb-N
2 cross sections, and the diffusion to the walls [
15], to be 206
, and this value was used in the modeling of the magnetic resonance curves of the magnetometer.
In addition to the bandwidth, which is equal to the magnetic resonance width, it is important to characterize the magnetometer in terms of dynamic range, since it operates in the open-loop mode. According to [
15], in the SERF regime and quasi-static approximation, the field at which the magnetometer response reaches maximum is
, where
g is the gyromagnetic coefficient 700 × 10
7 Hz/T; for
18 Hz, this field is 2.6 nT resulting in the dynamic range of
, where
is the sensitivity level at 5 fT. In a non-SERF regime, the dynamic range is even higher due to a larger bandwidth (BW). The level at which the response is saturated can be found by solving the Bloch equation in the rotating frame. At resonance,
. Because
in the non-SERF regime, the dynamic range is larger. Some complications arise due to the additional amplitude-dependent SE broadening owing to the reduction in light narrowing and hence non-linear response [
28].