Lithium niobate optomechanical crystal

POSTER

Abstract

Lithium niobate (LN) has excellent piezoelectric and electro-optic properties, enabling it as the workhorse material of the essential components for classical communication. Recently LN is also considered for quantum signal transduction and modulation. High-quality LN microring resonator and LN photonic crystal have been demonstrated with quality factor as high as 107 and 105 respectively.
Here we demonstrate 1D LN optomechanical crystals with optical quality factor as high as 300,000, 2 GHz mechanical mode with quality factor as high as 37,000 at 4 Kelvin and zero-point optomechanical coupling rate g/2π ~ 120 kHz. The optomechanical coupling is shown to be tunable down to zero by designing the orientation of the crystal. We further utilize the piezoelectric coupling to drive the mechanical mode directly and optically readout the motion. We identify both the mechanical bandgap and the mechanical modes. The optomechanical coupling and the compatibility of the LN-on-silicon material system with microwave qubits demonstrate the enormous potential of this piezo-optomechanical platform for quantum electro-optic conversion and coupling between microwave nanomechanics and superconducting qubits.

*Work supported by a Packard Fellowship, ONR MURI QOMAND, and Stanford University.

Presenters

  • Wentao Jiang

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
    • Applied Physics, Stanford University

Authors

  • Wentao Jiang

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
    • Applied Physics, Stanford University
  • Rishi N Patel

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
  • Felix Mayor

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
  • Timothy McKenna

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
    • Applied Physics, Stanford University
  • Patricio Arrangoiz-Arriola

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
    • Applied Physics, Stanford University
  • Christopher Sarabalis

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
  • Raphaël Van Laer

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
  • Amir Safavi-Naeini

    • Department of Applied Physics and Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
    • Applied Physics, Stanford University
    • Stanford University