241 research outputs found
Metastability and the Casimir Effect in Micromechanical Systems
Electrostatic and Casimir interactions limit the range of positional
stability of electrostatically-actuated or capacitively-coupled mechanical
devices. We investigate this range experimentally for a generic system
consisting of a doubly-clamped Au suspended beam, capacitively-coupled to an
adjacent stationary electrode. The mechanical properties of the beam, both in
the linear and nonlinear regimes, are monitored as the attractive forces are
increased to the point of instability. There "pull-in" occurs, resulting in
permanent adhesion between the electrodes. We investigate, experimentally and
theoretically, the position-dependent lifetimes of the free state (existing
prior to pull-in). We find that the data cannot be accounted for by simple
theory; the discrepancy may be reflective of internal structural instabilities
within the metal electrodes.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 4 figure
Influence of random roughness on the Casimir force at small separations
The influence of random surface roughness of Au films on the Casimir force is
explored with atomic force microscopy in the plate-sphere geometry. The
experimental results are compared to theoretical predictions for separations
ranging between 20 and 200 nm. The optical response and roughness of the Au
films were measured and used as input in theoretical predictions. It is found
that at separations below 100 nm, the roughness effect is manifested through a
strong deviation from the normal scaling of the force with separation distance.
Moreover, deviations from theoretical predictions based on perturbation theory
can be larger than 100%.Comment: 18, 5 figure
Efficient out-coupling and beaming of Tamm optical states via surface plasmon polariton excitation
We present evidence of optical Tamm states to surface plasmon polariton (SPP) coupling. We experimentally demonstrate that for a Bragg stack with a thin metal layer on the surface, hybrid Tamm-SPP modes may be excited when a grating on the air-metal interface is introduced. Out-coupling via the grating to free space propagation is shown to enhance the transmission as well as the directionality and polarization selection for the transmitted beam. We suggest that this system will be useful on those devices, where a metallic electrical contact as well as beaming and polarization control is needed
Comment on the sign of the Casimir force
I show that reflection positivity implies that the force between any mirror
pair of charge-conjugate probes of the quantum vacuum is attractive. This
generalizes a recent theorem of Kenneth and Klich to interacting quantum
fields, to arbitrary semiclassical bodies, and to quantized probes with
non-overlapping wavefunctions. I also prove that the torques on
charge-conjugate probes tend always to rotate them into a mirror-symmetric
position.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, Latex file. Several points clarified and
expanded, two references added
Efficient out-coupling and beaming of Tamm optical states via surface plasmon polariton excitation
We present evidence of optical Tamm states to surface plasmon polariton (SPP) coupling. We experimentally demonstrate that for a Bragg stack with a thin metal layer on the surface, hybrid Tamm-SPP modes may be excited when a grating on the air-metal interface is introduced. Out-coupling via the grating to free space propagation is shown to enhance the transmission as well as the directionality and polarization selection for the transmitted beam. We suggest that this system will be useful on those devices, where a metallic electrical contact as well as beaming and polarization control is needed
Casimir forces on a silicon micromechanical chip
Quantum fluctuations give rise to van der Waals and Casimir forces that
dominate the interaction between electrically neutral objects at sub-micron
separations. Under the trend of miniaturization, such quantum electrodynamical
effects are expected to play an important role in micro- and nano-mechanical
devices. Nevertheless, utilization of Casimir forces on the chip level remains
a major challenge because all experiments so far require an external object to
be manually positioned close to the mechanical element. Here, by integrating a
force-sensing micromechanical beam and an electrostatic actuator on a single
chip, we demonstrate the Casimir effect between two micromachined silicon
components on the same substrate. A high degree of parallelism between the two
near-planar interacting surfaces can be achieved because they are defined in a
single lithographic step. Apart from providing a compact platform for Casimir
force measurements, this scheme also opens the possibility of tailoring the
Casimir force using lithographically defined components of non-conventional
shapes
Stiction, Adhesion Energy and the Casimir Effect in Micromechanical Systems
We measure the adhesion energy of gold using a micromachined doubly-clamped
beam. The stress and stiffness of the beam are characterized by measuring the
spectrum of mechanical vibrations and the deflection due to an external force.
To determine the adhesion energy we induce stiction between the beam and a
nearby surface by capillary forces. Subsequent analysis yields a value J/m that is a factor of approximately six smaller than predicted
by idealized theory. This discrepancy may be resolved with revised models that
include surface roughness and the effect of adsorbed monolayers intervening
between the contacting surfaces in these mesoscopic structures.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Thermofield Dynamics and Casimir Effect for Fermions
A generalization of the Bogoliubov transformation is developed to describe a
space compactified fermionic field. The method is the fermionic counterpart of
the formalism introduced earlier for bosons (J. C. da Silva, A. Matos Neto, F.
C. Khanna and A. E. Santana, Phys. Rev. A 66 (2002) 052101), and is based on
the thermofield dynamics approach. We analyse the energy-momentum tensor for
the Casimir effect of a free massless fermion field in a -dimensional box at
finite temperature. As a particular case the Casimir energy and pressure for
the field confined in a 3-dimensional parallelepiped box are calculated. It is
found that the attractive or repulsive nature of the Casimir pressure on
opposite faces changes depending on the relative magnitude of the edges. We
also determine the temperature at which the Casimir pressure in a cubic boc
changes sign and estimate its value when the edge of the cybe is of the order
of confining lengths for baryons.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Annals of Physic
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