论文标题
基于密度语音晶体工程的超连加工纳米力学谐振器
Ultra-coherent nanomechanical resonators based on density phononic crystal engineering
论文作者
论文摘要
具有异常低耗散率的微力学系统和纳米力学系统正在实现超敏感检测器和量子信息系统的下一代技术。近年来,已经发现了降低耗散率的新技术和方法,并允许使用具有与环境非常隔离的语音模式的机械振荡器进行工程化,从而具有接近10亿的质量因素。隔离和控制单个语音模式的强大策略是基于Phonic Crystal Engineering。在这里,我们提出了一种基于材料密度的周期性变化的纳米力学振荡器的语音晶体工程的新方法。为了避免引入材料密度变化导致的额外弯曲损失,增加的质量构成了将损失稀释的纳米阵列。使用这种新型技术用于语音水晶工程,我们在室温环境中设计和制造具有质量因子十亿个质量因子的波纹机械振荡器。这些新的语音晶体的灵活性空间很大,可以通过拓扑优化的优化语音晶体图案和应变工程来实现进一步的进步。这将允许机械膜的工程,其质量因素接近100亿。这种极低的机械耗散速率将能够开发从室温,暗物质的超敏感探测器,自发波形崩溃,重力和高效率量子信息传感器的超敏感探测器,诸如量子限制的原子力显微镜之类的发展。
Micro- and nanomechanical systems with exceptionally low dissipation rates are enabling the next-generation technologies of ultra-sensitive detectors and quantum information systems. New techniques and methods for lowering the dissipation rate have in recent years been discovered and allowed for the engineering of mechanical oscillators with phononic modes that are extremely well isolated from the environment and thus possessing quality factors close to and beyond 1 billion. A powerful strategy for isolating and controlling a single phononic mode is based on phononic crystal engineering. Here we propose a new method for phononic crystal engineering of nanomechanical oscillators that is based on a periodic variation of the material density. To circumvent the introduction of additional bending losses resulting from the variation of material density, the added mass constitutes an array of nanopillars in which the losses will be diluted. Using this novel technique for phononic crystal engineering, we design and fabricate corrugated mechanical oscillators with quality factors approaching one billion in a room temperature environment. The flexibility space of these new phononic crystals is large and further advancement can be attained through optimized phononic crystal patterning and strain engineering via topology optimization. This will allow for the engineering of mechanical membranes with quality factors approaching 10 billion. Such extremely low mechanical dissipation rates will enable the development of radically new technologies such as quantum-limited atomic force microscopy at room-temperature, ultra-sensitive detectors of dark matter, spontaneous waveform collapses, gravity, and high-efficiency quantum information transducers.