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Nanostrings Serve as Probes

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New fabrication techniques have enabled the development of on-chip mechanical elements with dimensions on the nanometer scale. Their application, however, has been limited by the lack of sufficiently sensitive techniques for measuring the motion of these tiny devices, until now.

A team of scientists at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics (MPQ), led by Tobias Kippenberg, leader of the Independent Junior Research Group "Laboratory of Photonics and Quantum Measurements" at MPQ and tenure track assistant professor at the EPFL Lausanne; and Jörg Kotthaus, professor at LMU Munich, have now successfully developed a novel method at MPQ.

Nanostrings.jpg
Schematic of the experiment: The nanostrings (yellow) interact with the optical near-field that leaks out of the toroid glass-resonator (violet). When a single string is approached into the optical near-field, the optical resonance frequency of the microresonator gets exponentially reduced. (Image: MPQ)

On-chip glass cylinders with diameters around 50 microns, which are capable of storing light, played a key role in the study. The scientists could show that the optical near-field, that is the light-field that is leaking out of the glass cylinders can be used as an actuator and sensitive probe for nanomechanical oscillators. This enables measurements that are only limited by the fundamental quantum fluctuations of light. And so the novel technique, for the first time, allows measurement sensitivities at the level of the quantum mechanical zero-point fluctuations of the nano-oscillators, which is of great interest for fundamental research. However, applications such as single-atom or single-charge detection by atomic or magnetic force microscopy may benefit from the extremely low-noise method with a noise background at the level of the standard quantum-limit.

Nanomechanical oscillators are ideal candidates for studying quantum limits of mechanical motion in an experimental setting. Moreover, they are the basis for a variety of precision measurements. Significant attention has been devoted to developing sensitive readout techniques for motion over the past decade. Optical methods have thereby achieved the best results. However, these have been limited to objects that are larger than the wavelength. Techniques based on electron flow, which are applicable to nanoscale objects, have so far reached only limited precision.

The MPQ and LMU physicists have now for the first time successfully applied optical methods to nanoscale mechanical oscillators. This is fundamentally challenging as diffraction losses occur as soon as sub-wavelength objects are being looked at. In the present experiment this problem is bypassed by using optical near-fields. A key element is a cylindrical resonator made out of glass with a diameter of approximately 50 microns.

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The microtoroid can store light if it exhibits the right wavelength – if the toroid's optical circumference is an integer multiple of the wavelength. A small portion of the stored light, however, the so-called optical near-field, leaks out of the resonator and can be used as a probe for the nanomechanical oscillators (see schematic). These are strained silicon nitride strings which have typical cross-sections of 100 times 500 nanometers and are 15-40 microns long (nanostrings and microtoroids were fabricated in the clean rooms of Kotthaus at LMU and at EPFL Lausanne).

If the nanostrings are brought in close proximity to the toroid (into its near-field which extends a few hundred nanometers from its surface) both can interact with each other. Thereby the nanostrings act as a dielectric and locally change the refractive index seen by the light field. This leads to a change of the toroid's optical circumference and thus of the toroid's resonance frequency.

The optical resonance frequency shift caused by a single nanostring is so large that even its Brownian motion has a strong and easily measureable influence. This allows highly-sensitive measurements of the strings' motion. The sensitivity to changes in the distance between string and toroid is thereby as small as the quantum-mechanical zero-point fluctuations of the nanostring, which are expected at absolute zero temperature and equal the standard quantum-limit.

Besides the high sensitivity to the motion of nanoscale objects there is another important aspect of the work, according to Georg Anetsberger, PhD student Kippenberg's group. Equally important is the first experimental demonstration that also nanoscale objects can directly be manipulated by radiation pressure, e.g. cooled down or driven into oscillation.

"We can observe that the dipole force of the optical near-field leads to dynamical backaction which can drive the nanostrings into coherent, laser-like oscillations," explained Anetsberger.

The employed method can, in principle, be applied to all dielectric nanomechanical oscillators which could further foster their use as ultra-sensitive sensors. Kippenberg said that the versatility of microtoroids which have been the focus of his research for a few years now becomes evident.

"We have developed an experimental platform which could greatly broaden the possible applications of nanomechanical oscillators," Keppenberg added. "Moreover it constitutes an interface which allows the interaction of photons and phonons in such a way that quantum-mechanical effects could become measureable even at room temperature."

For more information, visit: www.mpq.mpg.de

Published: October 2009
Glossary
actuator
Mechanical device intended for the translation (rotational and linear) using high precision control from electronically operated circuits. See linear actuator; rotary actuator.
nano
An SI prefix meaning one billionth (10-9). Nano can also be used to indicate the study of atoms, molecules and other structures and particles on the nanometer scale. Nano-optics (also referred to as nanophotonics), for example, is the study of how light and light-matter interactions behave on the nanometer scale. See nanophotonics.
photonics
The technology of generating and harnessing light and other forms of radiant energy whose quantum unit is the photon. The science includes light emission, transmission, deflection, amplification and detection by optical components and instruments, lasers and other light sources, fiber optics, electro-optical instrumentation, related hardware and electronics, and sophisticated systems. The range of applications of photonics extends from energy generation to detection to communications and...
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