| Literature DB >> 31117759 |
S Shiva P Nathamgari1,2, Siyan Dong1,2, Lior Medina1, Nicolaie Moldovan3, Daniel Rosenmann4, Ralu Divan4, Daniel Lopez4, Lincoln J Lauhon5, Horacio D Espinosa1,2.
Abstract
Nanomechanical resonators make exquisite force sensors due to their small footprint, low dissipation, and high frequencies. Because the lowest resolvable force is limited by ambient thermal noise, resonators are either operated at cryogenic temperatures or coupled to a high-finesse optical or microwave cavity to reach sub aN Hz-1/2 sensitivity. Here, we show that operating a monolayer WS2 nanoresonator in the strongly nonlinear regime can lead to comparable force sensitivities at room temperature. Cavity interferometry was used to transduce the nonlinear response of the nanoresonator, which was characterized by multiple pairs of 1:1 internal resonance. Some of the modes exhibited exotic line shapes due to the appearance of Hopf bifurcations, where the bifurcation frequency varied linearly with the driving force and forms the basis of the advanced sensing modality. The modality is less sensitive to the measurement bandwidth, limited only by the intrinsic frequency fluctuations, and therefore, advantageous in the detection of weak incoherent forces.Keywords: Two-dimensional materials; internal resonance; nanomechanical resonator; nonlinearity; transition-metal dichalcogenides
Year: 2019 PMID: 31117759 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b01442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189