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Publications

Young's modulus and thermal expansion of tensioned graphene membranes

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
I.R. Storch
R. De Alba
V.P. Adiga
T.S. Abhilash
R.A. Barton
H.G. Craighead
J.M. Parpia
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

Tensioned graphene membranes are of interest both for fundamental physics and for applications ranging from water filtration to nanomechanical resonators. It is generally assumed that these membranes have a stretching modulus of about 340 N/m and a negative, temperature-independent thermal expansion coefficient due to transverse phonon modes. In this paper, we study the two-dimensional Young's modulus and thermal expansion of graphene as functions of temperature by using laser interferometry to detect the static displacement of the membrane in a cryostat.

Journal
Physical Review B
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1719875
ECCS-1542081
DGE-0903653
FA9550-16-1-0031
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group
Paul McEuen Group

Fabrication of microfluidic cavities using Si-to-glass anodic bonding

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N. Zhelev
T.S. Abhilash
R.G. Bennett
E.N. Smith
B. Ilic
J.M. Parpia
L.V. Levitin
X. Rojas
A.J. Casey
J. Saunders
Abstract

We demonstrate the fabrication of ∼1.08 μm deep microfluidic cavities with characteristic size as large as 7 mm × 11 mm or 11 mm diameter, using a silicon-glass anodic bonding technique that does not require posts to act as separators to define cavity height. Since the phase diagram of 3He is significantly altered under confinement, posts might act as pinning centers for phase boundaries.

Journal
Review of Scientific Instruments
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR1202991
1202991
1708341
EP/J022004/1
DMR1664043
DMR1708341
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group

Measuring Frequency Fluctuations in Nonlinear Nanomechanical Resonators

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
O. Maillet
X. Zhou
R.R. Gazizulin
R. Ilic
J.M. Parpia
O. Bourgeois
A.D. Fefferman
E. Collin
Abstract

Advances in nanomechanics within recent years have demonstrated an always expanding range of devices, from top-down structures to appealing bottom-up MoS2 and graphene membranes, used for both sensing and component-oriented applications. One of the main concerns in all of these devices is frequency noise, which ultimately limits their applicability. This issue has attracted a lot of attention recently, and the origin of this noise remains elusive to date.

Journal
ACS Nano
Date Published
Funding Source
1708341
647917
DMR 1708341
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group

Temperature-dependence of stress and elasticity in wet-transferred graphene membranes

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
R. De Alba
T.S. Abhilash
A. Hui
I.R. Storch
H.G. Craighead
J.M. Parpia
Abstract

We report measurements of the mechanical properties of two suspended graphene membranes in the temperature range of 80 K to 550 K. For this entire range, the resonant frequency and quality factor of each device were monitored continuously during cooling and heating. Below 300 K, we have additionally measured the resonant frequency's tunability via electrostatic force, and modeled this data to determine graphene's tension and elastic modulus; both of these parameters are found to be strongly temperature-dependent in this range.

Journal
Journal of Applied Physics
Date Published
Funding Source
ECCS-1542081
1708341
DMR-1202991
DMR-1708341
DMR-1120296
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group

Low-Power Photothermal Self-Oscillation of Bimetallic Nanowires

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
R. De Alba
T.S. Abhilash
R.H. Rand
H.G. Craighead
J.M. Parpia
Abstract

We investigate the nonlinear mechanics of a bimetallic, optically absorbing SiN-Nb nanowire in the presence of incident laser light and a reflecting Si mirror. Situated in a standing wave of optical intensity and subject to photothermal forces, the nanowire undergoes self-induced oscillations at low incident light thresholds of <1 μW due to engineered strong temperature-position (T-z) coupling. Along with inducing self-oscillation, laser light causes large changes to the mechanical resonant frequency ω0 and equilibrium position z0 that cannot be neglected.

Journal
Nano Letters
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1120296
DMR-1202991
ECCS-1542081
1120296
1202991
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group

The A-B transition in superfluid helium-3 under confinement in a thin slab geometry

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N. Zhelev
T.S. Abhilash
E.N. Smith
R.G. Bennett
X. Rojas
L. Levitin
J. Saunders
J.M. Parpia
Abstract

The influence of confinement on the phases of superfluid helium-3 is studied using the torsional pendulum method. We focus on the transition between the A and B phases, where the A phase is stabilized by confinement and a spatially modulated stripe phase is predicted at the A-B phase boundary. Here we discuss results from superfluid helium-3 contained in a single 1.08-μm-thick nanofluidic cavity incorporated into a high-precision torsion pendulum, and map the phase diagram between 0.1 and 5.6 bar.

Journal
Nature Communications
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1202991
1202991
EP/J022004/1
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group

Intertwined superfluid and density wave order in two-dimensional 4 He

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Ján Nyéki
A. Phillis
A. Ho
D. Lee
P. Coleman
J. Parpia
B. Cowan
J. Saunders
Abstract

Superfluidity is a manifestation of the operation of the laws of quantum mechanics on a macroscopic scale. The conditions under which superfluidity becomes manifest have been extensively explored experimentally in both quantum liquids (liquid 4 He being the canonical example) and ultracold atomic gases, including as a function of dimensionality. Of particular interest is the hitherto unresolved question of whether a solid can be superfluid.

Journal
Nature Physics
Date Published
Funding Source
1202991
EP/H048375/1
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group

Observation of a new superfluid phase for 3He embedded in nematically ordered aerogel

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N. Zhelev
M. Reichl
T.S. Abhilash
E.N. Smith
K.X. Nguyen
E.J. Mueller
J.M. Parpia
Abstract

In bulk superfluid 3He at zero magnetic field, two phases emerge with the B-phase stable everywhere except at high pressures and temperatures, where the A-phase is favoured. Aerogels with nanostructure smaller than the superfluid coherence length are the only means to introduce disorder into the superfluid. Here we use a torsion pendulum to study 3He confined in an extremely anisotropic, nematically ordered aerogel consisting of ∼410 nm-thick alumina strands, spaced by ∼100 nm, and aligned parallel to the pendulum axis.

Journal
Nature Communications
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR 1202991
PHY 1508300
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group

Tunable phonon-cavity coupling in graphene membranes

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
R. De Alba
F. Massel
I.R. Storch
T.S. Abhilash
A. Hui
P.L. McEuen
H.G. Craighead
J.M. Parpia
Abstract

A major achievement of the past decade has been the realization of macroscopic quantum systems by exploiting the interactions between optical cavities and mechanical resonators. In these systems, phonons are coherently annihilated or created in exchange for photons. Similar phenomena have recently been observed through phonon-cavity coupling - energy exchange between the modes of a single system mediated by intrinsic material nonlinearity.

Journal
Nature Nanotechnology
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1120296
ECCS-15420819
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group
Paul McEuen Group

Size modulated transition in the fluid-structure interaction losses in nano mechanical beam resonators

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
S.D. Vishwakarma
A.K. Pandey
J.M. Parpia
S.S. Verbridge
H.G. Craighead
R. Pratap
Abstract

An understanding of the dominant dissipative mechanisms is crucial for the design of a high-Q doubly clamped nanobeam resonator to be operated in air. We focus on quantifying analytically the viscous losses - the squeeze film damping and drag force damping - that limit the net quality factor of a beam resonator, vibrating in its flexural fundamental mode with the surrounding fluid as air at atmospheric pressure.

Journal
Journal of Applied Physics
Date Published
Funding Source
CSIR 22(0696)/15/EMR-II
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group