Cavity-less on-chip optomechanics using excitonic transitions in semiconductor heterostructures

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Abstract

The hybridization of semiconductor optoelectronic devices and nanomechanical resonators provides a new class of optomechanical systems in which mechanical motion can be coupled to light without any optical cavities. Such cavity-less optomechanical systems interconnect photons, phonons and electrons (holes) in a highly integrable platform, opening up the development of functional integrated nanomechanical devices. Here we report on a semiconductor modulation-doped heterostructure-cantilever hybrid system, which realizes efficient cavity-less optomechanical transduction through excitons. The opto-piezoelectric backaction from the bound electron-hole pairs enables us to probe excitonic transition simply with a sub-nanowatt power of light, realizing high-sensitivity optomechanical spectroscopy. Detuning the photon energy from the exciton resonance results in self-feedback cooling and amplification of the thermomechanical motion. This cavity-less on-chip coupling enables highly tunable and addressable control of nanomechanical resonators, allowing high-speed programmable manipulation of nanomechanical devices and sensor arrays.

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Okamoto, H., Watanabe, T., Ohta, R., Onomitsu, K., Gotoh, H., Sogawa, T., & Yamaguchi, H. (2015). Cavity-less on-chip optomechanics using excitonic transitions in semiconductor heterostructures. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9478

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