Ultrasensitive nano-optomechanical force sensor operated at dilution temperatures

Cooling down nanomechanical force probes is a generic strategy to enhance their sensitivities through the concomitant reduction of their thermal noise and mechanical damping rates. However, heat conduction becomes less efficient at low temperatures, which renders difficult to ensure and verify their...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2021-07, Vol.12 (1), p.4124-4124, Article 4124
Hauptverfasser: Fogliano, Francesco, Besga, Benjamin, Reigue, Antoine, Mercier de Lépinay, Laure, Heringlake, Philip, Gouriou, Clement, Eyraud, Eric, Wernsdorfer, Wolfgang, Pigeau, Benjamin, Arcizet, Olivier
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cooling down nanomechanical force probes is a generic strategy to enhance their sensitivities through the concomitant reduction of their thermal noise and mechanical damping rates. However, heat conduction becomes less efficient at low temperatures, which renders difficult to ensure and verify their proper thermalization. Here we implement optomechanical readout techniques operating in the photon counting regime to probe the dynamics of suspended silicon carbide nanowires in a dilution refrigerator. Readout of their vibrations is realized with sub-picowatt optical powers, in a situation where less than one photon is collected per oscillation period. We demonstrate their thermalization down to 32 ± 2 mK, reaching very large sensitivities for scanning probe force sensors, 40 zN Hz −1/2 , with a sensitivity to lateral force field gradients in the fN m −1 range. This opens the road toward explorations of the mechanical and thermal conduction properties of nanoresonators at minimal excitation level, and to nanomechanical vectorial imaging of faint forces at dilution temperatures. Optical readout techniques for nanomechanical force probes usually generate more heat than what can be dissipated through the nanoresonators. Here, the authors use an interferometric readout scheme, achieving large force sensitivity using suspended silicon carbide nanowires at dilution temperatures.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-021-24318-y