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Journal article

Optical cavity cooling of mechanical modes of a semiconductor nanomembrane

From

University of Copenhagen1

Department of Photonics Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

Quantum and Laser Photonics, Department of Photonics Engineering, Technical University of Denmark3

Mechanical oscillators can be optically cooled using a technique known as optical-cavity back-action. Cooling of composite metal–semiconductor mirrors, dielectric mirrors and dielectric membranes has been demonstrated. Here we report cavity cooling of mechanical modes in a high-quality-factor and optically active semiconductor nanomembrane.

The cooling is a result of electron–hole generation by cavity photons. Consequently, the cooling factor depends on the optical wavelength, varies drastically in the vicinity of the semiconductor bandgap, and follows the excitonic absorption behaviour. The resultant photo-induced rigidity is large and a mode temperature cooled from room temperature down to 4 K is realized with 50 μW of light and a cavity finesse of just 10.

Thermal stress due to non-radiative relaxation of the electron–hole pairs is the primary cause of the cooling. We also analyse an alternative cooling mechanism that is a result of electronic stress via the deformation potential, and outline future directions for cavity optomechanics with optically active semiconductors.

Language: English
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group UK
Year: 2012
Pages: 168-172
ISSN: 17452481 and 17452473
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1038/nphys2196
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-0991-041X , 0000-0002-9348-9591 and 0000-0001-9859-6591

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