posted on 2024-05-31, 16:00authored byJuliana Jaramillo-Fernandez, Martin Poblet, David Alonso-Tomás, Christian Vinther Bertelsen, Elena López-Aymerich, Daniel Arenas-Ortega, Winnie E. Svendsen, Néstor E. Capuj, Albert Romano-Rodríguez, Daniel Navarro-Urrios
Nanomechanical resonators can serve as ultrasensitive, miniaturized force probes. While vertical structures like nanopillars are ideal for this purpose, transducing their motion is challenging. Pillar-based photonic crystals (PhCs) offer a potential solution by integrating optical transduction within the pillars. However, achieving high-quality PhCs is hindered by inefficient vertical light confinement. Here, we present a full-silicon 1D photonic crystal cavity based on nanopillars as a new platform with great potential for applications in force sensing and biosensing areas. Its unit cell consists of a silicon pillar with larger diameter at its top portion than at the bottom, which allows vertical light confinement and an energy bandgap in the near infrared range for transverse-magnetic (TM) polarization. We experimentally demonstrate optical cavities with Q-factors exceeding 1e3 constructed by inserting a defect within a periodic arrangement of this type of pillars. Given the fact that that each nanopillar naturally behaves as a nanomechanical cantilever, the fabricated geometries are excellent optomechanical (OM) photonic crystal cavities in which the mechanical motion of each nanopillar composing the cavity can be optically transduced. These novel geometries display enhanced mechanical properties, cost-effectiveness, integration possibilities, and scalability, and opens and new path in front of the widely used suspended Si beam OM cavities made on silicon-on-insulator.
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