Damping of mechanical vibrations by free electrons in metallic nanoresonators

We investigate the effect of free electrons on the quality factor (Q) of a metallic nanomechanical resonator in the form of a thin elastic beam. The flexural and longitudinal modes of the beam are modeled using thin beam elasticity theory, and simple perturbation theory is used to calculate the rate...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Lindenfeld, Ze'ev, Lifshitz, Ron
Format Paper Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 02.11.2012
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Summary:We investigate the effect of free electrons on the quality factor (Q) of a metallic nanomechanical resonator in the form of a thin elastic beam. The flexural and longitudinal modes of the beam are modeled using thin beam elasticity theory, and simple perturbation theory is used to calculate the rate at which an externally excited vibration mode decays due to its interaction with free electrons. We find that electron-phonon interaction significantly affects the Q of longitudinal modes, and may also be of significance to the damping of flexural modes in otherwise high-Q beams. The finite geometry of the beam is manifested in two important ways. Its finite length breaks translation invariance along the beam and introduces an imperfect momentum conservation law in place of the exact law. Its finite width imposes a quantization of the electronic states that introduces a temperature scale for which there exists a crossover from a high-temperature macroscopic regime, where electron-phonon damping behaves as if the electrons were in the bulk, to a low-temperature mesoscopic regime, where damping is dominated by just a few dissipation channels and exhibits sharp non-monotonic changes as parameters are varied. This suggests a novel scheme for probing the electronic spectrum of a nanoscale device by measuring the Q of its mechanical vibrations.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1211.0450