This paper describes the theoretical and experimental investigation of interdigitated transducers capable of producing focused acoustical beams in thin film piezoelectric materials. A mathematical formalism describing focused acoustical beams, lamb beams, is presented and related to their optical counterparts in two- and three-dimensions. A novel Fourier domain transducer design methodology is developed and utilized to produce near diffraction limited focused beams within a thin film AlN membrane. The properties of the acoustic beam formed by the transducer were studied by means of Doppler vibrometry implemented with a scanning confocal balanced homodyne interferometer. The Fourier domain modal analysis confirmed that 83% of the acoustical power was delivered to the targeted focused beam which was constituted from the lowest order symmetric mode, while 1% was delivered unintentionally to the beam formed from the anti-symmetric mode, and the remaining power was isotropically scattered. The transmission properties of the acoustic beams as they interact with devices with wavelength scale features were also studied, demonstrating minimal insertion loss for devices in which a subwavelength and pinhole apertures were included. [2018-0059]
Electric field-based frequency tuning of acoustic resonators at the material level provides an enabling technology for building complex tunable filters. Tunable acoustic resonators were fabricated in thin plates (h/λ ∼ 0.05) of X-cut lithium niobate (90°, 90°, ψ = 170°). Lithium niobate is known for its large electromechanical coupling (SH: K2 40%) and thus applicability for low-insertion loss and wideband filter applications. We demonstrate the effect of a DC bias to shift the resonant frequency by 0.4% by directly tuning the resonator material. The mechanism is based on the nonlinearities that exist in the piezoelectric properties of lithium niobate. Devices centered at 332 MHz achieved frequency tuning of 12 kHz/V through application of a DC bias.
The performance of electronic systems for radio-frequency (RF) spectrum analysis is critical for agile radar and communications systems, ISR (intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance) operations in challenging electromagnetic (EM) environments, and EM-environment situational awareness. While considerable progress has been made in size, weight, and power (SWaP) and performance metrics in conventional RF technology platforms, fundamental limits make continued improvements increasingly difficult. Alternatively, we propose employing cascaded transduction processes in a chip-scale nano-optomechanical system (NOMS) to achieve a spectral sensor with exceptional signal-linearity, high dynamic range, narrow spectral resolution and ultra-fast sweep times. By leveraging the optimal capabilities of photons and phonons, the system we pursue in this work has performance metrics scalable well beyond the fundamental limitations inherent to all electronic systems. In our device architecture, information processing is performed on wide-bandwidth RF-modulated optical signals by photon-mediated phononic transduction of the modulation to the acoustical-domain for narrow-band filtering, and then back to the optical-domain by phonon-mediated phase modulation (the reverse process). Here, we rely on photonics to efficiently distribute signals for parallel processing, and on phononics for effective and flexible RF-frequency manipulation. This technology is used to create RF-filters that are insensitive to the optical wavelength, with wide center frequency bandwidth selectivity (1-100GHz), ultra-narrow filter bandwidth (1-100MHz), and high dynamic range (70dB), which we will present. Additionally, using this filter as a building block, we will discuss current results and progress toward demonstrating a multichannel-filter with a bandwidth of < 10MHz per channel, while minimizing cumulative optical/acoustic/optical transduced insertion-loss to ideally < 10dB. These proposed metric represent significant improvements over RF-platforms.
We demonstrate conversion of a 10GHz radio frequency signal directly to fiber optics. A Fabry-Perot cavity formed between a fiber tip and an AlN-film acoustic resonator electrode enables resonantly enhanced phase modulation of back-reflected light.
By relating the response theory of optical forces to waveguide dispersion, we are able to employ dispersion engineering to optimize radiation pressure forces at the nanoscale in W1 photonic crystal waveguides.