Literatura académica sobre el tema "Nanomécanique hybride"
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Tesis sobre el tema "Nanomécanique hybride"
Mercier, de Lépinay Laure. "Habillage mécanique d'un nanofil par un champ de force : de la mesure vectorielle ultrasensible aux systèmes quantiques hybrides". Thesis, Université Grenoble Alpes (ComUE), 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017GREAY016/document.
Texto completoThe study of the hybrid coupling between the vibrations of a mechanical resonator and a quantum degree of freedom requires extremely high force sensitivities. This was one of the motivations for the recent development of ultra-light nano-oscillators which are ultra-sensitive force probes now routinely operating at the attoNewton level.The first part of this work deals with the mechanical dressing of a silicon carbide suspended nanowire oscillating in two transverse directions. Its Brownian or driven evolution in an external force field modifies its mechanical properties: eigen-frequencies and eigen-directions of oscillation. An optical technique to measure the nanowire vibrations in two dimensions was developed. First, this technique enabled to map out an electrostatic force field, which revealed a dressing phenomenology specific to dimensions greater than one. In particular, shearing components of the force field are responsible for a rotation of the eigen-directions of vibration. Second, the measurement technique was tested in an optical force field applied by a laser focused on the nanowire. This field contains a rotational, non-conservative component. The reported experimental observations: eigenmodes orthogonality breaking, distorsion and amplification of Brownian motion spectra, are all in good agreement with the model of the mechanical dressing. Using a protocol adapted to the multidimensionality of the system, a deviation to the fluctuation-dissipation relation has also been measured, as a consequence of the non-conservative force bringing the system out of equilibrium. The study of this system's thermodynamic properties suggests corrections to the fluctuation-dissipation relation and predicts a squeezing of the oscillator's thermal noise in rotational force fields.The second part of the thesis concerns the hybrid system composed of a nanowire and a spin qubit: a colored NV center in diamond bound to its extremity. The optical properties of this oscillating single photon source are characterized through the measurement of space-time fluorescence correlations on which the oscillator's vibrations are encoded. We then developed a motion measurement technique compatible with very low photon fluxes, in particular inferior to the mechanical decoherence rate. The last part of the manuscript presents a preliminary study of the spin-mechanical coupling. After the observation of a phononic Mollow triplet, the experimental developments of the first part of the thesis were integrated in a second-generation stabilized hybrid experiment bringing the ultrasensitive force measurement within the reach of the hybrid system
Finazzer, Matteo. "Boîtes quantiques accordées par contrainte mécanique et nanostructures photoniqueslarge bande pour le traitement quantique de l'information". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Grenoble Alpes, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024GRALY014.
Texto completoBright and tunable sources of indistinguishable single photons are key devices for photonic quantum information technologies. Building such a source with a semiconductor quantum dot (QD) requires a “knob” to tune the QD emission wavelength combined with a broadband photonic structure for light extraction. This thesis reports several important steps towards this goal.We first investigate a nanocylinder cavity, a photonic structure that, despites its simplicity, offers a pronounced Purcell acceleration of spontaneous emission over a large spectral bandwidth. We demonstrate the first resonant optical spectroscopy of a QD embedded in a nanopost cavity, by leveraging a cross-polarization scheme that efficiently suppresses stray laser light (collaboration with the group of Richard Warburton). This technique enabled a precise characterization of the optical properties of the emitter.We next demonstrate a tunable single-photon source based on a QD embedded in a tapered photonic wire. In our device, a set of on chip electrodes biased with a DC voltage applies an electrostatic force to the wire. As the wire bends, the resulting mechanical strain changes the bandgap energy of the embedded QDs. We demonstrate both a large increase and a large decrease of the QD emission wavelength by controlling the wire bending direction.With an AC voltage, the above-mentioned actuation scheme can also excite the vibration modes of the nanowire. This capability is interesting in the context of hybrid nanomechanics. In our experiments, we leverage the QD photoluminescence to detect and identify the wire mechanical vibrations. In particular, we evidence a high-order flexural mode that resonates at 190 MHz, a value that exceeds the QD radiative rate. This constitutes an important step towards the spectrally-resolved-sidebands regime.The devices demonstrated in this work open promising prospects for the future developments of quantum photonics and hybrid nanomechanics
Yeo, Inah. "Une boite quantique dans un fil photonique : spectroscopie et optomécanique". Phd thesis, Université de Grenoble, 2012. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00809344.
Texto completoYeo, Inah. "A quantum dot in a photonic wire : spectroscopy and optomechanics". Thesis, Grenoble, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012GRENY076/document.
Texto completoIn the framework of this thesis, single InAs/GaAs quantum dot devices were studied by optical means. Starting with a general description of self-assembled InAs QDs, two types of single QD devices were presented. The first approach was a tapered GaAs photonic wire embedding single InAs QDs whose efficiency as a single photon source was previously shown to be 90%. We investigated several optical properties of the single QDs. The charged and neutral states of the QD were identified and selectively excited using quasi-resonant excitation.The first original result of this thesis is the observation of a continuous temporal blue-drift of the QD emission energy. We attributed this blue drift to oxygen adsorption onto the sidewall of the wire, which modified the surface charge and hence the electric field seen by the QD. Moreover, we demonstrated that a proper coating of the GaAs photonic nanowire surface suppressed the drift. The temperature effect on this phenomenon revealed an adsorption peak around 20K, which corresponds to the adsorption of oxygen on GaAs. This observation is in good agreement with previous temperature studies with a tapered photonic wire. This was the first study of the spectral stability of photonic wires embedding QDs, crucial for resonant quantum optics experiments. As an alternative, we took advantage of this temporal drift to tune QD emission energies. In a controlled way, we tuned into resonance two different QDs which were embedded in the same photonic nanowire. In the last part of this work, we studied the influence of the stress on single QDs contained in a trumpet-like GaAs photonic wire. The main effect of stress is to shift the luminescence lines of a QD. We applied the stress by exciting mechanical vibration modes of the wire. When the wire is driven at its the mechanical resonance the time-integrated photoluminescence spectrum is broaden up to 1 meV owing to the oscillating stress, The measured spectral modulation is a first signature of strain-mediated coupling between a mechanical resonator and embedded QD single light emitter. With a stroboscopic technique, we isolated a certain phase of the oscillating wire and thereby selected a value of QD emission energies. As a highlight of our study, we managed to bring two different QDs contained in the same wire into resonance by controlling their relative phase. In addition, we could extract the 2D spatial positioning of embedded QDs from the spectral shifts observed for two orthogonal mechanical polarizations.. The investigation of the strain-mediated tuning of QDs can, therefore, be an effective tool to explore the QD positions without destroying the sample
Rohr, Sven. "Hybrid spin-nanomechanical systems in parametric interaction". Thesis, Grenoble, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014GRENY046/document.
Texto completoProbing the quantum world with macroscopic objects has been a core challenge for research in physics during the past decades. Proposed systems to reach this goal include hybrid devices that couple a nanomechanical resonator to a single spin qubit. In particular, the coherent actuation of a macroscopic mechanical oscillator by a single electronic spin would open perspectives in the creation of arbitrary quantum states of motion.In this manuscript, we investigate a hybrid system coupling a nanomechanical oscillator and a single electronic spin of a NV defect in magnetic interaction. We focus on the parametric interaction case, when the mechanical motion modulates the qubit energy, and in particular when the driven qubit and mechanical oscillators evolves on similar timescales. In that situation a synchronization of the qubit dynamics onto the mechanical motion is observed. The phenomenon is first explored on a test experiment where mechanical motion is replaced by a parametrically coupled RF field. It allows to establish the main properties of the phenomenon, which is subsequently investigated on the core experiment. It consists of a NV defect attached at the vibrating extremity of a silicon carbide nanowire, immersed in a strong magnetic field gradient. The bidimensional character of the nanowire deformations is responsible for novel vectorial signatures in the synchronization, which can also be viewed as a phononic Mollow triplet as observed in early quantum electrodynamics experiments. We finally explore the robustness of the synchronization against the Brownian motion of the resonator and demonstrate the possibility to protect the qubit against this additional decoherence source by applying a small coherent mechanical drive
Hoang, Minh Tuan. "Modélisation et simulation multi échelle des effets de taille et des couplages électromécaniques dans les nanostructures". Thesis, Paris Est, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PEST1074/document.
Texto completoNanostructures, and more specifically semiconductor nanowires, have drawn special attention in recent years for many applications such as energy harvesting systems or sensors of very high precision. Many recent experiments and theoretical ab-initio calculations have evidenced size effects, which can significantly modify the electromechanical properties of nanowires for diameters below 10 nm. The objective of this thesis is to provide multi-scale modeling of electromechanical properties of nanostructures, such as ionic nanowires and laminated nanocomposites, to reproduce the size effects associated with nanoscale in a continuum model, based on ab-initio calculations to identify and validate the models. In a first part, the surface effects in isolated homogeneous piezoelectric nanowires are modeled. A multi-scale approach is developed, including continuous nanowires modeling taking into account an additional surface energy in the piezoelectric laminates where the associated parameters are identified by ab-initio calculations. For this, a procedure based on slabs is developed, allowing through first-principles calculations on successive slabs thicknesses to isolate the surface energy and to deduce the surface elastic and piezoelectric coefficients. The equations of the continuous model are then solved by a finite element method including appropriate surface elements. The continuous multi-scale model is compared with ab-initio calculations involving full atomistic models of nanowires with different diameters (from 0.6 to 3.9 nm) to validate model regarding size effects of electromechanical properties. In the second part, multi-scale models are constructed to describe the size effects for heterogeneous nanostructures. These structures include coated nanowires or laminated nanocomposites. For nanowires with radial heterogeneity, the previously developed approach is extended to the case of coated surfaces, and involves a continuous surface energy incorporating the effects of the coating. For laminated AlN/GaN nanocomposites, size effects observed by ab-initio calculations are caused by the presence of the interfaces and induce size-dependent elastic properties with respect to the layer thickness. A continuum model based on an imperfect interface is proposed to describe the size dependent effective elastic properties of the overall composite, which are identified by ab-initio calculations. In the last part, nanogenerators system based on nanowires are modeled, involving nanowires arrays aligned in polymer substrates with graphene electrode. The previously developed finite element models are used to simulate the electromechanical properties of such systems