visual
visual

세미나

  • HOME
  • >
  • 소식
  • >
  • 세미나
날짜 2021-06-11 14:30 
연사  
장소 Online seminar 

 

SRC Seminar

 

 

Engineering sound waves and vibrations in multi-mode nanomechanical systems

 

Dr. Jin Woong Cha

Quantum Technology Institute, KRISS

 

Jun. 11 (Fri.), 02:30 PM

Online seminar

https://kaist.zoom.us/j/89283252628
회의 ID: 892 8325 2628

암호: 916514

 

 

 

 

Abstract:

Nanoscale mechanical systems provide versatile physical interfaces with their ability to interact with various physical states, for example, electromagnetic fields (e.g., microwaves and optical light) and quantum states (e.g., spins and electrons). Therefore, engineering nanoscale sound waves and vibrations in nanomechanical systems is essential for a wide range of applications in sensing and information processing both in the classical and quantum regimes. My talk will focus on two different nanomechanical platforms I have recently worked on. In the first part of my talk, I will discuss a unique nanomechanical platform called nanomechanical lattices which enable electrically tunable phonon propagation dynamics [1] and topologically protected phonon transport [2] at MHz frequencies. This platform consists of arrays of mechanically coupled, free-standing silicon-nitride nanomechanical membranes that support propagating flexural elastic waves. For the second part of my talk, I will describe our recent studies on the cavity electromechanics in a superconducting nanoelectromechanical resonator implementing superconducting niobium [3]. This system demonstrates various optomechanical phenomena arising from the interaction of nanomechanical motions and microwave fields (e.g., phonon cooling and amplification, optomechanically induced reflection) and can be used in various applications such as quantum transducers. I will then conclude my talk by briefly describing our ongoing work at KRISS.

 

Reference:

[1] J. Cha, et al. Nature Nanotechnology 13, 1016-1020 (2018)

[2] J. Cha, et al. Nature 564, 229-233 (2018)

[3] J. Cha, et al. Nano Letters 21, 1800-1806 (2021)

 

 

Contact: SunYoung Choi, (sun.0@kaist.ac.kr)

Center for Quantum Coherence in Condensed Matter, KAIST

 

번호 날짜 연사 제목
공지 2025-09-01 12:00    2025년 가을학기 콜로키움
공지 2025-09-05 11:00    2025년 가을학기 물리학과 특별세미나 (광학/응집물리 분야)
195 2025-04-22 16:00  Dr. Nanse Esaki (The University of Tokyo)  Spin Nernst and thermal Hall effects of topological triplons in quantum dimer magnets on the maple-leaf and star lattices file
194 2018-05-11 16:00    암페어 단위 재정의와 단전자 펌프 소자 개발 file
193 2016-04-26 16:00    Transport spectroscopy for electronic bands in carbon-based nanomaterials with weak-bond contacts
192 2025-12-09 16:00  Dr. Moosung Lee (Universität Stuttgart, Germany)  Inverse photonic design for exploring quantum motion in levitated optomechanics file
191 2022-08-12 10:00    Twisted Bilayer Magnets file
190 2022-08-12 10:00    Twisted Bilayer Magnets file
189 2022-10-06 13:00    Counting States with Global Symmetry
188 2019-06-12 15:00    The relation between free and interacting fermionic SPT phases file
187 2016-09-29 16:00    Exploring the phase diagram of BaBiO3: epic voyage of just another bad trip?
186 2017-04-28 16:00    Carbon nanotubes coupled to superconducting impedance matching circuits
185 2023-07-11 11:00    Ordered phases, non-Fermi liquid, and quantum criticality driven by entanglement between multipoles and conduction electrons
184 2019-07-30 16:00    Dirac fermions and flat bands in correlated kagome metals file
183 2017-11-03 14:30    Quantum Resistor-Capacitor Circuit with Majorana Edge States file
182 2019-09-10 15:00    Two-Stage Kondo Effect file
181 2017-02-01 14:00    Quantum electron optics using flying electrons
180 2015-11-23 13:30    What's Beyond the Standard Model? Lessons from Run I and what might come in Run II
179 2016-07-08 11:00    Isostatic magnetism
178 2016-05-19 15:00    The CERN Resonant WISP Search: Development, Results and Lesson-Learned
177 2023-06-22 16:00    [CAPP Seminar] The muon g-2 puzzle file
176 2015-10-15 10:00    Development of Large-Bore, High Field Magnets at the NHMFL