Abstract

Controlling the vibrations in solids is crucial to tailor their mechanical properties and their interaction with light. Thermal vibrations represent a source of noise and dephasing for many physical processes at the quantum level. One strategy to avoid these vibrations is to structure a solid such that it possesses a phononic stop band, i.e., a frequency range over which there are no available mechanical modes. Here, we demonstrate the complete absence of mechanical vibrations at room temperature over a broad spectral window, with a 5.3 GHz wide band gap centered at 8.4 GHz in a patterned silicon nanostructure membrane measured using Brillouin light scattering spectroscopy. By constructing a line-defect waveguide, we directly measure GHz localized modes at room temperature. Our experimental results of thermally excited guided mechanical modes at GHz frequencies provides an eficient platform for photon-phonon integration with applications in optomechanics and signal processing transduction.

Document Type

Prepublicació

Language

English

Publisher

 

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Florez, O. ; Arregui, G.; Albrechtsen, M. ; Ng, R. C. ; Gomis-Bresco, J. ; Stobbe, S. ; Sotomayor Torres, C. M. and García, P. D. «Engineering nanoscale hypersonic phonon transport». Nature nanotechnology, vol. 17, issue 9 (Sep. 2022), p. 947-951 ;

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-022-01178-1

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open access

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