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Spin Exchange Optical Pumping (SEOP)

picture of SEOP apparatus

In the spin-exchange method (apparatus shown above), two steps are needed to polarize 3He by this method: polarization of the rubidium(Rb)/potassium (K), and spin exchange between the Rb/K and the 3He nucleus. An optically thick vapor (1014 to 1015 cm−3) of Rb/K is generated by heating a cell filled with 3He, typically 70 mbar of N2, and a small amount of Rb/K metal. The electronic spin of the Rb/K is polarized by optical pumping with near infrared laser light. A simplified two-level pumping scheme (which ignores the nuclear spin of the rubidium) is shown in Fig. 2. circularly polarized (σ+) light excites only atoms in the mj = -1/2 state. Atoms that decay to the mj = +1/2 state remain in that state, but atoms that decay mj = -1/2 state are re-excited by the laser. The nitrogen in the cell suppresses emission of photons, which depolarize other atoms. During binary collisions between the Rb/K atoms and the 3He nucleus, the hyperfine interaction between the unpaired Rb/K electron and the 3He nucleus can transfer spin. This is a slow process, resulting in long time constants (typically from several hours to a few tens of hours) for polarizing 3He, but the time constant is independent of the 3He density. The temporal evolution of the polarization is given by

  1. PHe(t) = PAseHe)[1 − exp(−ΓHet)]

where PHe is the 3He polarization, γse is the spin exchange rate (proportional to Rb vapor density), PA is the alkali polarization, and ΓHe is the 3He spin relaxation rate and is given by

  1. ΓHe = 1/T1 + (1 + X)γse

where T1 is the relaxation time of 3He spin at room temperature. X is a phenomenological parameter that reflects the recent observation that the slope of the 3He spin relaxation rate with alkali density exceeds the spin-exchange rate. This phenomenon, an "excess" relaxation that scales with alkali density, was recently discovered at the Univ. of Wisconsin {Chann02}, and has been recently studied at Wisconsin and NIST {Chann03 , Gentile05 , Babcock}.

The above equation (1) describes polarization asymptotically, approaching the limiting value γsePA/He with a pump-up time constant of 1/ΓHe. Typical values of 1/γse and T1 are 5 to 20 hours and 50 to 500 hours, respectively. With sufficient laser power and long lifetime cells, it is possible for PA to approach unity and for 1/T1 to be a small correction. In this case, PHe can approach 1/(1+X). Until recently it was thought that X would be near zero, but the relaxation studies at Wisconsin first revealed a value of 0.33, which yields a polarization limit of 75%. More extensive studies at Wisconsin and NIST have now shown that X varies from cell to cell, in a range between 0.15 and 1. For most of the larger spin filter cells that we have employed, X is 0.25 to 0.3 {Babcock}. Improving the maximum achievable 3He polarization in SEOP requires us to eliminate or reduce the temperature-dependent relaxation that is the origin of the current limit.



Diagram of SEOP Station Optical Pumping NSF Figures of Merit




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Last modified 11-03-09