We investigate the application of Ramsey spectroscopy for the development of a microcell atomic clock based on coherent population trapping (CPT). The dependence of the central Ramsey-CPT fringe properties on key experimental parameters is first studied for optimization of the clock's short-term frequency stability. The sensitivity of the clock frequency to light-shift effects is then studied. In comparison with the continuous-wave (CW) regime case, the sensitivity of the clock frequency to laser power variations is reduced by a factor up to 14 and 40.3 for dark times of 150 and [Formula: see text], respectively, at the expense of intensity 3.75 times higher for short-term stability optimization. The dependence of the clock frequency on the microwave power is also reduced in the Ramsey case. We demonstrate that the Ramsey-CPT interrogation improves the clock Allan deviation for averaging times higher than 100 s. With a dark time of [Formula: see text], a clock fractional frequency stability of 3.8 ×10 at 10 s is obtained, in comparison with the level of 8×10 obtained in the standard CW case, in similar environmental conditions. These results demonstrate that Ramsey-based interrogation protocols might be an attractive approach for the development of chip-scale atomic clocks (CSACs) with enhanced mid- and long-term stability.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TUFFC.2021.3085249DOI Listing

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