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Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials

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Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials. / Esmenda, Joshoua Condicion; Aguila, Myrron Albert Callera; Wang, Jyh-Yang et al.
In: arxiv.org, 19.08.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

Harvard

Esmenda, JC, Aguila, MAC, Wang, J-Y, Lee, T-H, Chen, Y-C, Yang, C-Y, Lin, K-H, Chang-Liao, K-S, Kafanov, S, Pashkin, Y & Chen, C-D 2021, 'Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials', arxiv.org. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2108.08566

APA

Esmenda, J. C., Aguila, M. A. C., Wang, J-Y., Lee, T-H., Chen, Y-C., Yang, C-Y., Lin, K-H., Chang-Liao, K-S., Kafanov, S., Pashkin, Y., & Chen, C-D. (2021). Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials. arxiv.org. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2108.08566

Vancouver

Esmenda JC, Aguila MAC, Wang J-Y, Lee T-H, Chen Y-C, Yang C-Y et al. Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials. arxiv.org. 2021 Aug 19. doi: 10.48550/arXiv.2108.08566

Author

Esmenda, Joshoua Condicion ; Aguila, Myrron Albert Callera ; Wang, Jyh-Yang et al. / Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials. In: arxiv.org. 2021.

Bibtex

@article{6eee91aab1bb4a33b051c5bfd45da5f4,
title = "Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials",
abstract = " Studies involving nanomechanical motion have evolved from its detection and understanding of its fundamental aspects to its promising practical utility as an integral component of hybrid systems. Nanomechanical resonators' indispensable role as transducers between optical and microwave fields in hybrid systems, such as quantum communications interface, have elevated their importance in recent years. It is therefore crucial to determine which among the family of nanomechanical resonators is more suitable for this role. Most of the studies revolve around nanomechanical resonators of ultrathin structures because of their inherently large mechanical amplitude due to their very low mass. Here, we argue that the underutilized nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered two-dimensional (2D) materials are the better fit for this role because of their comparable electrostatic tunability and larger optomechanical responsivity. To show this, we first demonstrate the electrostatic tunability of mechanical modes of a multilayered nanomechanical resonator made from graphite. We also show that the optomechanical responsivity of multilayered devices will always be superior as compared to the few-layer devices. Finally, by using the multilayered model and comparing this device with the reported ones, we find that the electrostatic tunability of devices of intermediate thickness is not significantly lower than that of ultrathin ones. Together with the practicality in terms of fabrication ease and design predictability, we contend that multilayered 2D nanomechanical resonators are the optimal choice for the electromagnetic interface in integrated quantum systems. ",
keywords = "cond-mat.mes-hall, physics.app-ph",
author = "Esmenda, {Joshoua Condicion} and Aguila, {Myrron Albert Callera} and Jyh-Yang Wang and Teik-Hui Lee and Yen-Chun Chen and Chi-Yuan Yang and Kung-Hsuan Lin and Kuei-Shu Chang-Liao and Sergey Kafanov and Yuri Pashkin and Chii-Dong Chen",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
day = "19",
doi = "10.48550/arXiv.2108.08566",
language = "English",
journal = "arxiv.org",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Optoelectrical nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered 2D materials

AU - Esmenda, Joshoua Condicion

AU - Aguila, Myrron Albert Callera

AU - Wang, Jyh-Yang

AU - Lee, Teik-Hui

AU - Chen, Yen-Chun

AU - Yang, Chi-Yuan

AU - Lin, Kung-Hsuan

AU - Chang-Liao, Kuei-Shu

AU - Kafanov, Sergey

AU - Pashkin, Yuri

AU - Chen, Chii-Dong

PY - 2021/8/19

Y1 - 2021/8/19

N2 - Studies involving nanomechanical motion have evolved from its detection and understanding of its fundamental aspects to its promising practical utility as an integral component of hybrid systems. Nanomechanical resonators' indispensable role as transducers between optical and microwave fields in hybrid systems, such as quantum communications interface, have elevated their importance in recent years. It is therefore crucial to determine which among the family of nanomechanical resonators is more suitable for this role. Most of the studies revolve around nanomechanical resonators of ultrathin structures because of their inherently large mechanical amplitude due to their very low mass. Here, we argue that the underutilized nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered two-dimensional (2D) materials are the better fit for this role because of their comparable electrostatic tunability and larger optomechanical responsivity. To show this, we first demonstrate the electrostatic tunability of mechanical modes of a multilayered nanomechanical resonator made from graphite. We also show that the optomechanical responsivity of multilayered devices will always be superior as compared to the few-layer devices. Finally, by using the multilayered model and comparing this device with the reported ones, we find that the electrostatic tunability of devices of intermediate thickness is not significantly lower than that of ultrathin ones. Together with the practicality in terms of fabrication ease and design predictability, we contend that multilayered 2D nanomechanical resonators are the optimal choice for the electromagnetic interface in integrated quantum systems.

AB - Studies involving nanomechanical motion have evolved from its detection and understanding of its fundamental aspects to its promising practical utility as an integral component of hybrid systems. Nanomechanical resonators' indispensable role as transducers between optical and microwave fields in hybrid systems, such as quantum communications interface, have elevated their importance in recent years. It is therefore crucial to determine which among the family of nanomechanical resonators is more suitable for this role. Most of the studies revolve around nanomechanical resonators of ultrathin structures because of their inherently large mechanical amplitude due to their very low mass. Here, we argue that the underutilized nanomechanical resonators made from multilayered two-dimensional (2D) materials are the better fit for this role because of their comparable electrostatic tunability and larger optomechanical responsivity. To show this, we first demonstrate the electrostatic tunability of mechanical modes of a multilayered nanomechanical resonator made from graphite. We also show that the optomechanical responsivity of multilayered devices will always be superior as compared to the few-layer devices. Finally, by using the multilayered model and comparing this device with the reported ones, we find that the electrostatic tunability of devices of intermediate thickness is not significantly lower than that of ultrathin ones. Together with the practicality in terms of fabrication ease and design predictability, we contend that multilayered 2D nanomechanical resonators are the optimal choice for the electromagnetic interface in integrated quantum systems.

KW - cond-mat.mes-hall

KW - physics.app-ph

U2 - 10.48550/arXiv.2108.08566

DO - 10.48550/arXiv.2108.08566

M3 - Journal article

JO - arxiv.org

JF - arxiv.org

ER -