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Quantum Chemistry
Nanobenders: efficient piezoelectric actuators for widely tunable nanophotonics at CMOS-level voltages
arXiv
Authors: Wentao Jiang, Felix M. Mayor, Rishi N. Patel, Timothy P. McKenna, Christopher J. Sarabalis, Amir H. Safavi-Naeini
Year
2019
Paper ID
14679
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
154
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Tuning and reconfiguring nanophotonic components is needed to realize systems incorporating many components. The electrostatic force can deform a structure and tune its optical response. Despite the success of electrostatic actuators, they suffer from trade-offs between tuning voltage, tuning range, and on-chip area. Piezoelectric actuation could resolve all these challenges. Standard materials possess piezoelectric coefficients on the order of {0.01} nm/V, suggesting extremely small on-chip actuation using potentials on the order of one volt. Here we propose and demonstrate compact piezoelectric actuators, called nanobenders, that transduce tens of nanometers per volt. By leveraging the non-uniform electric field from submicron electrodes, we generate bending of a piezoelectric nanobeam. Combined with a sliced photonic crystal cavity to sense displacement, we show tuning of an optical resonance by sim 5 nm/V \({0.6} THz/V\) and between 1520 and 1560 nm $sim 400$ linewidths with only {4} V. Finally, we consider other tunable nanophotonic components enabled by nanobenders.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2019 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Tuning and reconfiguring nanophotonic components is needed to realize systems incorporating many components.
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