Thickness dependence of the mechanical properties of piezoelectric high-Qm nanomechanical resonators made from aluminium nitride

Nanomechanical resonators with high quality factors ( Q _m ) enable mechanics-based quantum technologies, in particular quantum sensing and quantum transduction. High- Q _m nanomechanical resonators in the kHz to MHz frequency range can be realized in tensile-strained thin films that allow the use o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anastasiia Ciers, Alexander Jung, Joachim Ciers, Laurentius Radit Nindito, Hannes Pfeifer, Armin Dadgar, Jürgen Bläsing, André Strittmatter, Witlef Wieczorek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2024-01-01
Series:Materials for Quantum Technology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/2633-4356/ad9b64
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Summary:Nanomechanical resonators with high quality factors ( Q _m ) enable mechanics-based quantum technologies, in particular quantum sensing and quantum transduction. High- Q _m nanomechanical resonators in the kHz to MHz frequency range can be realized in tensile-strained thin films that allow the use of dissipation dilution techniques to drastically increase Q _m . In our work, we study the material properties of tensile-strained piezoelectric films made from aluminium nitride (AlN). We characterize crystalline AlN films with a thickness ranging from 45 nm to 295 nm, which are directly grown on Si(111) by metal–organic vapour-phase epitaxy. We report on the crystal quality and surface roughness, the piezoelectric response, and the residual and released stress of the AlN thin films. Importantly, we determine the intrinsic quality factor of the films at room temperature in high vacuum. We fabricate and characterize AlN nanomechanical resonators that exploit dissipation dilution to enhance the intrinsic quality factor by utilizing the tensile strain in the film. We find that AlN nanomechanical resonators below 200 nm thickness exhibit the highest $Q_\text{m}\times f_\text{m}$ -product, on the order of 10 ^12  Hz. We discuss possible strategies to optimize the material growth that should lead to devices that reach even higher $Q_\text{m}\times f_\text{m}$ -products. This will pave the way for future advancements of optoelectromechanical quantum devices made from tensile-strained piezoelectric AlN.
ISSN:2633-4356