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Optical cycling functionalization of aromatic molecules, towards laser cooling

ORAL

Abstract

Laser cooling relies on photon cycling, which can be enabled in polyatomic molecules when an “optical cycling center” (OCC) is attached to an electronegative ligand. It was proposed that molecules with a (metal) alkaline-earth(I)-oxide-radical structure, would have good OCC properties and, thus, would be amenable to laser cooling [1]. More recent theoretical work has indicated that the alkaline-earth(I)-oxide unit attached to a benzene ring would offer a good OCC that would be tunable by substituting the ring hydrogen atoms with more electronegative species [2]. Theory has also indicated that larger rings (such as naphthalene, pyrene, and coronene) can also provide good optical cycling properties [3]. We report the results of dispersed fluorescence measurements on CaO-Ph-X (Ph : phenyl, X = F, CH3, CF3) in a cryogenic buffer gas at 9 K. We find that the vibrational branching ratio (VBR) to the ground vibrational state is >90% for all species and 99% for CaO-Ph-3,4,5F [4]. We also study the napthol-based molecules CaO-Nap and SrO-Nap, and find that the 2-naphthyl positional variant of CaO-Nap also has a highly diagonal VBR, 96% [5]. These results demonstrate that the same principles that have led to laser cooling of di-, tri- and poly-atomic molecules (e.g. SrF, CaOH and CaOCH3) can likely be extended to phenolic and aromatic molecules.

[1] Kozyryev, et al, ChemPhysChem 2016, 17, 3641

[2] Dickerson, et al, PRL 2021, 126, 123002

[3] Dickerson, et al, JPCL 2021, 12, 3989–3995

[4] Zhu, et al, 2022, manuscript in preparation

[5] Mitra, et al, 2022, arXiv:2202.01685

Presenters

  • Debayan Mitra

    Columbia University, Harvard University

Authors

  • Debayan Mitra

    Columbia University, Harvard University

  • Guo-Zhu Zhu

    UCLA

  • Zack Lasner

    Harvard University

  • Claire Dickerson

    UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Los Angeles

  • Benjamin Augenbraun

    Harvard University

  • Guanming Lao

    UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Michael Frim

    Harvard University

  • Austin Bailey

    UCLA

  • Anastassia Alexandrova

    UCLA

  • Wesley C Campbell

    UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Justin R Caram

    UCLA, California State University, Los Angeles, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Los Angeles

  • Eric R Hudson

    UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles

  • John M Doyle

    Harvard University