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      A coherent nanomechanical oscillator driven by single-electron tunnelling

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          Abstract

          A single-electron transistor embedded in a nanomechanical resonator represents an extreme limit of electron-phonon coupling. While it allows fast and sensitive electromechanical measurements, it also introduces backaction forces from electron tunnelling that randomly perturb the mechanical state. Despite the stochastic nature of this backaction, it has been predicted to create self-sustaining coherent mechanical oscillations under strong coupling conditions. Here, we verify this prediction using real-time measurements of a vibrating carbon nanotube transistor. This electromechanical oscillator has some similarities with a laser. The single-electron transistor pumped by an electrical bias acts as a gain medium and the resonator acts as a phonon cavity. Although the operating principle is unconventional because it does not involve stimulated emission, we confirm that the output is coherent. We demonstrate other analogues of laser behaviour, including injection locking, classical squeezing through anharmonicity, and frequency narrowing through feedback.

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          Most cited references45

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          Approaching the quantum limit of a nanomechanical resonator.

          By coupling a single-electron transistor to a high-quality factor, 19.7-megahertz nanomechanical resonator, we demonstrate position detection approaching that set by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle limit. At millikelvin temperatures, position resolution a factor of 4.3 above the quantum limit is achieved and demonstrates the near-ideal performance of the single-electron transistor as a linear amplifier. We have observed the resonator's thermal motion at temperatures as low as 56 millikelvin, with quantum occupation factors of NTH = 58. The implications of this experiment reach from the ultimate limits of force microscopy to qubit readout for quantum information devices.
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            A Study of Locking Phenomena in Oscillators

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              Coupling mechanics to charge transport in carbon nanotube mechanical resonators.

              Nanoelectromechanical resonators have potential applications in sensing, cooling, and mechanical signal processing. An important parameter in these systems is the strength of coupling the resonator motion to charge transport through the device. We investigated the mechanical oscillations of a suspended single-walled carbon nanotube that also acts as a single-electron transistor. The coupling of the mechanical and the charge degrees of freedom is strikingly strong as well as widely tunable (the associated damping rate is approximately 3 x 10(6) Hz). In particular, the coupling is strong enough to drive the oscillations in the nonlinear regime.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101235387
                Nat Phys
                Nat Phys
                Nature physics
                1745-2473
                06 September 2019
                14 October 2019
                January 2020
                14 April 2020
                : 16
                : 1
                : 75-82
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Materials, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PH, United Kingdom
                [2 ]Department of Physics, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YB, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                [* ]Electronic address: e.a.laird@ 123456lancaster.ac.uk
                Article
                EMS84326
                10.1038/s41567-019-0683-5
                6949122
                31915459
                b83f3f9b-7a9e-486a-b91c-2b1ff58961c2

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                Physics
                Physics

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