The National Institute of Standards and Technology has recently begun a program to develop a primary pressure standard that is based on ultra-cold atoms, covering a pressure range of 1 × 10 Pa to 1 × 10 Pa and possibly lower. These pressures correspond to the entire ultra-high vacuum (UHV) range and extend into the extreme-high vacuum (XHV). This cold-atom vacuum standard (CAVS) is both a primary standard and absolute sensor of vacuum. The CAVS is based on the loss of cold, sensor atoms (such as the alkali-metal lithium) from a magnetic trap due to collisions with the background gas (primarily H) in the vacuum. The pressure is determined from a thermally-averaged collision cross section, which is a fundamental atomic property, and the measured loss rate. The CAVS is primary because it will use collision cross sections determined from calculations for the Li + H system. Primary traceability is transferred to other systems of interest using sensitivity coefficients.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5734116 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1681-7575/aa8a7b | DOI Listing |
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