Project description
Removing the damper on good vibrations
People have been harnessing the capabilities of mechanical oscillators for thousands of years, from chronometers in ancient times to the miniature nanosensors of today. Mechanical nano-oscillators are opening a new window on the atomic and subatomic world as we use changes in their oscillatory patterns to gain information about the molecules and materials with which they are interacting. The dissipation of their energy, or decrease in oscillatory amplitude over time, is a challenge to the precision and accuracy of measurements based on changes in their oscillations. The EU-funded ExCOM-cCEO project is exploiting emerging methods to achieve a new generation of ultra-low dissipation mechanical oscillators for advanced technologies.
Objective
The quest for mechanical oscillators with ultralow dissipation is motivated by classical and quantum sensing and technology, and precision measurements. For decades, the most coherent mechanical oscillators were acoustic vibrations in kg-scale crystalline bars. Recently a paradigm shift has occurred. The combination of elastic strain engineering – a technique used in microelectronics – with phononic mode engineering has resulted in 1D nano-strings with a mechanical quality factor Q of 0.8 billion – the highest ever achieved at room temperature. Remarkably, these new techniques have major untapped potential, as they have only been applied to non-crystalline materials in 1D. We propose a new generation of strain-engineered crystalline and superconducting mechanical oscillators whose Q-factors are predicted to exceed 100 billion in up to 2 dimensions. We will seek to reach this theoretical limit, probe new dissipation mechanisms, and utilize these oscillators for quantum optomechanics in new regimes and achieve room temperature ground state cooling and ponderomotive squeezing. Likewise, we will apply these techniques to create highly coherent superconducting electromechanical devices at milli-Kelvin temperatures, enabling quantum-enhanced force sensing and 1 second decoherence times. Secondly, we will explore a fundamentally new method for measurement and manipulation of microwave fields with optical fields – the nascent field of circuit Cavity-Electro-Optics (cCEO). First recognized over a decade ago, it is possible with optical fields to cool, amplify or interferometrically read out microwaves. Yet to date this regime has remained in accessible due to insufficient coupling strength between the microwave and optical fields. We will overcome this challenge based on a new circuit architecture, allowing laser cooling and laser amplification of microwaves and electro-optical masing using optical backaction, and thereby opening an entirely new way to manipulate microwaves.
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Funding Scheme
ERC-ADG - Advanced GrantHost institution
1015 Lausanne
Switzerland