1 research outputs found
Optomechanical Thermometry of Nanoribbon Cantilevers
Cadmium sulfide (CdS) nanostructures
have attracted a significant
amount of attention for a variety of optoelectronic applications including
photovoltaic cells, semiconductor lasers, and solid-state laser refrigeration
due to their direct bandgap around 2.42 eV and high radiative quantum
efficiency. Nanoribbons (NRs) of CdS have been claimed to laser cool
following excitation at 514 and 532 nm wavelengths by the annihilation
of optical phonons during anti-Stokes photoluminescence. To explore
this claim, we demonstrate a novel optomechanical experimental technique
for microthermometry of a CdSNR cantilever using Young’s modulus
as the primary temperature-dependent observable. Measurements of the
cantilever’s fundamental acoustic eigenfrequency at low laser
powers showed a red-shift in the eigenfrequency with increasing power,
suggesting net heating. At high laser powers, a decrease in the rate
of red-shift of the eigenfrequency is explained using Euler–Bernoulli
elastic beam theory, considering Hookean optical-trapping force. A
predicted imaginary refractive index for CdSNR based on experimental
temperature measurement agrees well with a heat transfer analysis
that predicts the temperature distribution within the cantilever and
the time required to reach steady state (<100 μs). This approach
is useful for investigating solid-state laser refrigeration of a wide
variety of material systems without the need for complex pump/probe
spectroscopy