APS March Meeting 2014
Volume 59, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 3–7, 2014;
Denver, Colorado
Session G24: Focus Session: Advances in Scanned Probe Microscopy II: High Frequencies and Optical Techniques
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Room: 504
Sponsoring
Unit:
GIMS
Chair: Sebastian Loth, Max Plank Institute for Structure and Dynamics
Abstract ID: BAPS.2014.MAR.G24.1
Abstract: G24.00001 : Nanoscale cantilevers with integrated optomechanical readout: increasing speed and sensitivity
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Vladimir Aksyuk
(National Institute of Standards and Technology)
Decreasing a mechanical probe size and mass into the nanoscale and
sub-picogram range offers a way to increase the transduction bandwidth while
maintaining the desired mechanical stiffness and, ideally, maintaining or
lowering the mechanical damping and the associated fundamental thermal force
noise. Such transducers require a new approach to low noise and fast motion
readout that is also stable, practical, low power and capable of operating
over a wide temperature range.
We are using on-chip cavity optomechanical sensing for realizing fast,
sensitive and practical integrated AFM probes. Integrated micrometer-scale
silicon microdisk high Q optical cavities evanescently couple to sense
motion of suspended silicon beams with nanoscale cross sections (e.g. 100 nm
x 260 nm). The sensors achieve sub- fm/Hz$^{0.5}$ motion sensitivity, which
is near the standard quantum limit for these beams, with dissipated optical
power under 300 $\mu $W and the readout bandwidth of approximately 1 GHz.
The mechanical properties of the beams are broadly adjustable by design,
covering four decades of mechanical stiffness (0.01 N/m to 290 N/m) and
frequencies from 250 kHz to 110 MHz, with similar motion readout sensitivity
across the range. Combining the low mass mechanical transducer with the
ultraprecise readout potentially opens up new regimes of operation while
also posing design tradeoffs in gain, bandwidth and dynamic range. The
mechanical probe can be excited and the dynamics can be tuned by
optomechanical effects as well as application of optical and electrostatic
forces via feedback. Effective stiffness modification, regenerative
oscillation as well as optomechanical and feedback damping can be useful in
different modalities of probe operation. Unresolved sideband operation gives
the readout bandwidth larger than the mechanical frequency, which is
particularly useful for broadband feedback actuation, e.g. to modify the
transfer function, extend the useful measurement bandwidth and cool the
sensor motion to reduce nonlinearity and mechanical backaction of the
mechanical probe on the sample.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2014.MAR.G24.1