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Ultrahigh-quality graphene resonators by liquid-based strain-engineering.

Ding-Rui ChenI-Fan HuHao-Ting ChinYu-Chi YaoRadha RamanMario HofmannChi-Te LiangYa-Ping Hsieh
Published in: Nanoscale horizons (2023)
Two-dimensional (2D) material-based nanoelectromechanical (NEM) resonators are expected to be enabling components in hybrid qubits that couple mechanical and electromagnetic degrees of freedom. However, challenges in their sensitivity and coherence time have to be overcome to realize such mechanohybrid quantum systems. We here demonstrate the potential of strain engineering to realize 2D material-based resonators with unprecedented performance. A liquid-based tension process was shown to enhance the resonance frequency and quality factor of graphene resonators six-fold. Spectroscopic and microscopic characterization reveals a surface-energy enhanced wall interaction as the origin of this effect. The response of our tensioned resonators is not limited by external loss factors and exhibits near-ideal internal losses, yielding superior resonance frequencies and quality factors to all previously reported 2D material devices. Our approach represents a powerful method of enhancing 2D NEM resonators for future quantum systems.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • molecular dynamics
  • quality improvement
  • molecular docking
  • high frequency
  • carbon nanotubes