942 research outputs found

    Efficient readout of micromechanical resonator arrays in ambient conditions

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    We present a method for efficient spectral readout of mechanical resonator arrays in dissipative environments. Magnetomotive drive and detection is used to drive double clamped resonators in the nonlinear regime. Resonators with almost identical resonance frequencies can be tracked individually by sweeping the drive power. Measurements are performed at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. These conditions enable application in high throughput resonant sensor arrays.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Strongly coupled modes in a weakly driven micromechanical resonator

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    We demonstrate strong coupling between the flexural vibration modes of a clamped-clamped micromechanical resonator vibrating at low amplitudes. This coupling enables the direct measurement of the frequency response via amplitude- and phase modulation schemes using the fundamental mode as a mechanical detector. In the linear regime, a frequency shift of 0.8 Hz\mathrm{0.8\,Hz} is observed for a mode with a line width of 5.8 Hz\mathrm{5.8\,Hz} in vacuum. The measured response is well-described by the analytical model based on the Euler-Bernoulli beam including tension. Calculations predict an upper limit for the room-temperature Q-factor of 4.5×105\mathrm{4.5\times10^5} for our top-down fabricated micromechanical beam resonators.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure

    Nanomechanical properties of few-layer graphene membranes

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    We have measured the mechanical properties of few-layer graphene and graphite flakes that are suspended over circular holes. The spatial profile of the flake's spring constant is measured with an atomic force microscope. The bending rigidity of and the tension in the membranes are extracted by fitting a continuum model to the data. For flakes down to eight graphene layers, both parameters show a strong thickness-dependence. We predict fundamental resonance frequencies of these nanodrums in the GHz range based on the measured bending rigidity and tension.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, This article has been accepted by Appl. Phys. Lett. After it is published, it will be found at http://apl.aip.org

    Amplitude calibration of 2D mechanical resonators by nonlinear optical transduction

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    Contactless characterization of mechanical resonances using Fabry-Perot interferometry is a powerful tool to study the mechanical and dynamical properties of atomically thin membranes. However, amplitude calibration is often not performed, or only possible by making assumptions on the device parameters such as its mass or the temperature. In this work, we demonstrate a calibration technique that directly measures the oscillation amplitude by detecting higher harmonics that arise from nonlinearities in the optical transduction. Employing this technique, we calibrate the resonance amplitude of two-dimensional nanomechanical resonators, without requiring knowledge of their mechanical properties, actuation force, geometric distances or the laser intensity

    Electric-field control of interfering transport pathways in a single-molecule anthraquinone transistor

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    It is understood that molecular conjugation plays an important role in charge transport through single-molecule junctions. Here, we investigate electron transport through an anthraquinone based single-molecule three-terminal device. With the use of an electric-field induced by a gate electrode, the molecule is reduced resulting into a ten-fold increase in the off-resonant differential conductance. Theoretical calculations link the change in differential conductance to a reduction-induced change in conjugation, thereby lifting destructive interference of transport pathways.Comment: Nano Letters (2015
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