Wang, M., Perez-Morelo, D. J., Ramer, G., Pavlidis, G., Schwartz, J. J., Yu, L., Ilic, R., Centrone, A., & Aksyuk, V. A. (2023). Beating thermal noise in a dynamic signal measurement by a nanofabricated cavity optomechanical sensor. Science Advances, 9(11). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adf7595
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
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Peer reviewed:
Yes
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Keywords:
AFM-IR; nanoscale
en
Abstract:
Thermal fluctuations often impose both fundamental and practical measurement limits on high-performance sensors, motivating the development of techniques that bypass the limitations imposed by thermal noise outside cryogenic environments. Here, we theoretically propose and experimentally demonstrate a measurement method that reduces the effective transducer temperature and improves the measurement precision of a dynamic impulse response signal. Thermal noise-limited, integrated cavity optomechanical atomic force microscopy probes are used in a photothermal-induced resonance measurement to demonstrate an effective temperature reduction by a factor of ≈25, i.e., from room temperature down as low as ≈12 K, without cryogens. The method improves the experimental measurement precision and throughput by >2×, approaching the theoretical limit of ≈3.5× improvement for our experimental conditions. The general applicability of this method to dynamic measurements leveraging thermal noise-limited harmonic transducers will have a broad impact across a variety of measurement platforms and scientific fields.