The institute
FEMTO's news

You are here

Two FEMTO-ST PhD students win awards at the IFCS-EFTF 2025 international conference

Their innovative work paves the way for new environmental monitoring devices and a new generation of atomic micro-clocks.

The 2025 International Frequency Control Symposium – European Frequency Time Forum (IFCS-EFTF) Joint Meeting, the major international conference in the field of Time-Frequency metrology, took place from May 12 to 16, 2025, in Querétaro, Mexico (https://2025.ieee-ifcs-eftf.org/).

During this conference, two PhD students from Time-Frequency department of FEMTO-ST, Ghida Fawaz (COSYMA) and Carlos Rivera-Aguilar (OHMS), obtained student prizes in their respective groups.

Ghida Fawaz works on the design of an innovative surface elastic wave device for real-time monitoring of air quality, and more specifically for quantifying fine particles present in the environment. This system combines a cascade impactor with SAW sensors positioned on the impaction surface, allowing for precise separation of particles according to their size, while ensuring instantaneous measurement of their deposited mass. To ensure reliable readings, an in-depth study was conducted on the sensitivity and repeatability of the sensors to particles under various conditions. The results revealed the need to regularly clean the sensors after their exposure to polluted atmospheres. To address this challenge, a self-cleaning mechanism was integrated into the impactor, exploiting the properties of surface elastic waves to displace a water droplet and thus restore the cleanliness of the sensors. These characteristics give this device an innovative character, meeting expectations compared to the solutions currently available on the market.

Carlos Rivera's (OHMS) studies concern the development of a microwave microcell atomic clock based on coherent population trapping. This clock, based on a Cs vapor microcell developed at FEMTO-ST (MN2S/MOSAIC, contact: N. Passilly), employs advanced pulsed interrogation techniques (Ramsey sequences) to drastically reduce the sensitivity of the clock frequency to variations in the parameters of the interrogation light field (laser power, laser frequency, etc.). The strength of                   C. Rivera's work was to implement this pulsed optical sequence without any external optical modulator, but by using direct modulation of the laser current. This approach maintains a compact clock architecture, compatible with real integration. The clock is controlled by an FPGA electronic board. With this method, C. Rivera-Aguilar has demonstrated a microcell atomic clock with fractional frequency stability in the low range of 10-12 at 1 day, i.e. 1 order of magnitude better than current commercial chip-scale atomic clocks (CSACs). This work could open the door to a new generation of CSACs with increased long-term stability performance, thus meeting the specifications of new applications.

Publications :
Carlos Rivera : https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0196975 , https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.01681

Contacts :
Ghida FAWAR
Carlos RIVERA

  • Mengjia Wang receives the « Chinese government award 2020 »

    As a PhD student of the Optics Department of FEMTO-ST , Mengjia Wang has been recognized by the Chinese Government for his outstanding work in the field of nanophotonics and plasmonics.

    Read more
  • Laurent LARGER named Fellow 2021 of OSA

    Full professor of Physics/Optics at the University of Franche-Comté and researcher at FEMTO-ST institute, Laurent Larger is rewarded for his pioneering work on nonlinear dynamics in optoelectronics and on the development of new architectures for photonic artificial intelligence.

    Read more
  • CNRS "Proof by Image" competition

     Discover the selection of the 20 images selected by the CNRS, one of which is presented by FEMTO-ST, and vote for the "audience award" photo.

    Read more
  • Imaging quantum interference of entangled photon pairs of extremely high dimensionality

    Researchers from the Optics Department have developed an imaging device allowing the spatial and temporal resolution of the phenomenon of quantum interference between pairs of entangled photons of extremely high dimensionality.

    Read more
  • Fei GAO Receives IEEE J.D. Irwin Early Career Award

    As a member of the SHARPAC team and Deputy Director of FEMTO-ST, Fei Gao has been recognized by the IEEE IES Society for his outstanding work in improving the reliability of hydrogen electric powertrains.

    Read more
  • Daniel HISSEL, winner of the CNRS 2020 Innovation Medal

    Full professor at the University of Franche-Comté, researcher at FEMTO-ST Institute and co-founder of a start-up on efficient hydrogen fuel cells, Daniel HISSEL is one of the four national winners of the CNRS 2020 Innovation Medal.

    Read more
  • A new source of infrared light thanks to fibre optic cascades

    Scientists from  FEMTO-ST Institute and McGill University (Montreal, Canada) have designed and developed in collaboration with three French companies a light source covering the entire mid-infrared wavelength range: from 2 to 10 µm.

    Read more
  • Topological crystals to guide waves on the water surface

    Topological crystals have the property of being conductive on their surface, but insulating in their volume which allows very efficient wave guidance by engineering the structure of these materials, generally arranged in a hexagonal symmetry, inspired by the graphene.

    Read more
  • An innovative solution to detect pollutants in the subsoil

    Researchers from FEMTO-STinstitute and the company TOTAL SA have succeeded in detecting organic pollutants with methods that did not require sampling and have been able to monitor the evolution of the pollution of the subsoil over periods ranging up to several years.

    Read more
  • FEMTO-ST is closed

    Within the framework of Coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic and  following the measures announced by the President of the French Republic,  all the premises of our laboratory in Besançon, Belfort and Montbéliard cities are closed to the public from this Tuesday March 17.

    Read more

Pages