High- Q , in-plane modes of nanomechanical resonators operated in air

Nanomechanical resonators have traditionally been limited to use in vacuum due to low quality factors that come as a result of viscous damping effects in air or liquid. We have fabricated arrays of 90 nm thick trampoline-shaped resonators, studied their resonant frequency spectrum as a function of p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied physics 2009-05, Vol.105 (9), p.094315-094315-6
Hauptverfasser: Waggoner, Philip S., Tan, Christine P., Bellan, Leon, Craighead, Harold G.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nanomechanical resonators have traditionally been limited to use in vacuum due to low quality factors that come as a result of viscous damping effects in air or liquid. We have fabricated arrays of 90 nm thick trampoline-shaped resonators, studied their resonant frequency spectrum as a function of pressure, and found that some high frequency modes exhibit quality factors over 2000 at atmospheric pressure. We have excited the in-plane resonances of these devices, verified their identities both experimentally and with finite element modeling, and demonstrated their advantageous characteristics for ambient sensing. Even after deposition of a relatively thick polymer layer, the in-plane resonant modes still boast quality factors on the order of 2000. These results show promise for the use of nanomechanical resonant sensors in real-time atmospheric sensing applications.
ISSN:0021-8979
1089-7550
DOI:10.1063/1.3123767