Abstract
Superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) are the most sensitive detectors of magnetic flux1 and are also used as quantum two-level systems (qubits)2. Recent proposals have explored a novel class of devices that incorporate micromechanical resonators into SQUIDs to achieve controlled entanglement of the resonator ground state and a qubit3 as well as permitting cooling and squeezing of the resonator modes and enabling quantum-limited position detection4,5,6,7,8,9,10. In spite of these intriguing possibilities, no experimental realization of an on-chip, coupled mechanical-resonator–SQUID system has yet been achieved. Here, we demonstrate sensitive detection of the position of a 2 MHz flexural resonator that is embedded into the loop of a d.c. SQUID. We measure the resonator’s thermal motion at millikelvin temperatures, achieving an amplifier-limited displacement sensitivity of 10 fm Hz−1/2 and a position resolution that is 36 times the quantum limit.
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Main
d.c. superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) consist of a superconducting loop with two Josephson junctions1. The voltage across the d.c. SQUID does not depend only on the current through it, but also on the magnetic flux piercing through the loop, enabling tiny changes in the magnetic field to be detected. Besides this more common application, the d.c. SQUID should also be able to detect small variations in the area of its loop due to the motion of an integrated flexural resonator in the presence of a static magnetic field. Our Nb-based d.c.-SQUID displacement detector is based on this principle and is shown in Fig. 1a,b and described in the Methods section. Its potential displacement sensitivity can be estimated as follows. The resonator has a length of ℓ=50 μm and the loop is placed in a magnetic field of B=0.1 T oriented as described in Fig. 1d. A deflection u=1 fm of the resonator will then result in a change in flux through the loop of the order of Bℓu=2.5μ Φ0, where Φ0=h/2e=2.07 fT m2 is the flux quantum. Low-temperature d.c. SQUIDs have a typical flux sensitivity of 10−6Φ0 Hz−1/2 (ref. 11), which is sufficient to reach a displacement sensitivity of 0.4 fm Hz−1/2. This places the d.c.-SQUID detector in the same league as other highly sensitive on-chip position detectors12,13,14,15.
Before using the d.c. SQUID as a displacement detector, its characteristics are determined to find a proper bias point. Figure 1d shows a schematic diagram of the measurement set-up, which is described in detail in the Methods section. A bias current IB is applied to the d.c. SQUID and its output voltage V is measured. The d.c. SQUID produces a non-zero output voltage once IB exceeds the d.c.-SQUID’s critical current IC, which depends on the magnetic flux bias Φ through the d.c.-SQUID loop and on the critical current of the individual junctions, I0. Figure 2a shows that at B=0 T the d.c.-SQUID’s V–IB relationship exhibits hysteresis, indicating that the d.c. SQUID is underdamped1. This hysteresis must be suppressed to operate the d.c. SQUID as a sensitive linear flux detector. This is achieved by increasing B, which decreases the critical current of the junctions16. We find that for B≥0.1 T the d.c. SQUID is sufficiently damped such that no hysteresis is observed (Fig. 2a). Note that in this detection scheme the d.c. SQUID is biased above the critical current. It can in principle also be used as a position detector when it is biased below the critical current, where it acts as a tunable inductor4.
The d.c. SQUID is most sensitive to changes in the magnetic flux when it is tuned to a working point with a steep slope of V (Φ). Figure 2b shows the relation between V and the applied stripline current IF that changes Φ. For a d.c. SQUID, both IC and V depend periodically on Φ with a period of Φ0. The steepest slope occurs approximately half-way between the minimum and maximum of the voltage swing. The difference between these two voltages is the peak-to-peak voltage swing VPP. Figure 2c shows VPP as a function of IB, where VPPmax is the maximum voltage swing. Numerical simulations (see the Supplementary Information) show that this maximum occurs at IB=2I0.
In our experiment there is a slow flux drift, which makes it difficult to maintain a constant flux bias by simply applying a constant stripline current. Therefore, a feedback loop is used that maintains a constant average setpoint voltage 〈V 〉=VSP by adjusting IF for a given value of IB. An added advantage of using the feedback loop is that it compensates external low-frequency (<1 kHz) flux noise.
Numerical analysis (see the Supplementary Information) reveals that the ratios IB/I0 and VSP/VPPmax, needed to achieve the maximum value of the flux responsivity dV/dΦ, are approximately constant. This allows us to apply a bias that gives maximum dV/dΦ even if I0 and VPPmax are changing owing to temperature variations as shown in Fig. 2d. In practice, values for VSP and IB must be chosen such that they allow stable operation of the feedback loop in addition to maximizing dV/dΦ. The values IB=2I0 and VSP=VPPmax/2 are found to provide a good balance between these requirements.
As the resonator is integrated into the d.c. SQUID, the flux through the loop depends on the position u of the fundamental out-of-plane mode of the beam according to Φ=Φa+a Bℓu, where Φa is the applied flux when the resonator is in its equilibrium position and a is a geometrical factor that depends on the mode shape. The position u is defined such that the effective spring constant of the mode is kR=m(2πfR)2, where m is the total mass of the beam and fR is the resonance frequency of the mode. Atomic force microscopy shows that the resonator is buckled (Fig. 1c, inset) and we use a continuum model to find a=0.91 (see the Supplementary Information). In our configuration, the d.c. SQUID functions as a linear displacement detector in the small-signal limit a Bℓu≪Φ0 with a displacement responsivity dV/du=(dV/dΦ)(dΦ/du).
The resonance frequency fR is located by driving the resonator with a piezo actuator (Fig. 1d) and monitoring the resulting output voltage of the d.c. SQUID. The resonance frequency is 2.0018 MHz with a Lorentzian amplitude response (Fig. 3a). Room-temperature dynamic force microscopy17 confirms that this is indeed the fundamental mode (Fig. 1c) and it is also in good agreement with our continuum model. From a least-squares Lorentzian fit, we extract a quality factor Q=1.8×104 at B=100 mT and refrigerator temperature T=20 mK. For all measurements, the peak voltage amplitude is much smaller than VPPmax (Fig. 2d), which means that the flux oscillations due to the resonator are within the small-signal limit.
Thermomechanical noise thermometry is used to calibrate the deflection responsivity13,14,15. Without actively driving the resonator, the noise power spectral density of the output voltage is acquired around the mechanical resonance frequency. The spectra in Fig. 3b show a constant background on which a Lorentzian peak is superimposed. This peak is caused by the Brownian motion of the beam. The quality factor and resonance frequency are identical to those of the driven response (Fig. 3a). The voltage noise power due to the resonator 〈VR2〉, the area underneath the peak, is extracted from the fitted response function.
The noise spectrum is measured in the temperature range 20 mK<T<500 mK. To compare the noise power at different temperatures, 〈VR2〉 must be corrected for differences in dV/dΦ. The flux responsivity is proportional to VPPmax and thus has the same temperature dependence (Fig. 2d). This enables the introduction of the corrected voltage noise power 〈V ′R2〉=〈VR2〉·(VPPmax(20 mK)/VPPmax(T))2. The corrected noise powers in Fig. 3c show a linear decrease with temperature down to 100 mK. The slope S(B) from a linear fit to this data, combined with the equipartition theorem gives the deflection responsivity dV/du=VPPmax(T)/VPPmax(20 mK)·(S(B)kR/kB)1/2, where kB is the Boltzmann constant and kR=97 N m−1, using m=6.1×10−13 kg. The resulting displacement responsivities at 20 mK are 3.0×10−2 nV fm−1 and 2.3×10−2 nV fm−1 for B=100 mT and 111 mT respectively. The fact that the displacement responsivity at 111 mT is lower than at 100 mT might seem counter-intuitive, but the larger flux change for the same displacement is compensated by a stronger reduction of VPPmax, as shown in Fig. 2d. The best displacement sensitivity coincides with the highest responsivity because the flux-based position detector is limited by the noise floor of the room-temperature voltage amplifier . The highest observed sensitivity is and occurs at 20 mK and 100 mT.
It is interesting to calculate the position resolution of the detector and compare it with the fundamental limit imposed by quantum mechanics18. The position resolution is , where Δf=πfR/2Q is the effective noise bandwidth of the resonator. This yields Δu=133 fm for the highest observed sensitivity of the detector. The quantum limit for the position resolution of a continuous linear detector is for our resonator 19, so that the detector resolution is a factor Δu/ΔuQL=36 from the quantum limit. The resonator enters the quantum regime once it has a thermal occupation factor N≈TR/TQ<1, where TQ=h fR/kB is the quantum temperature and TR is the resonator temperature, which can be found from the voltage noise power using TR=〈VR2〉kR/kB〈dV/du〉2. From the data in Fig. 3c, the lowest observed resonator temperature is TR=84 mK, which yields N=878.
There are two major challenges for observing quantum behaviour in a macroscopic mechanical resonator20: a quantum-limited position detector18,19,21 with resolution Δu=ΔuQL and a resonator with N<1. These requirements can be simultaneously met by our device configuration. The quantum mechanical ground state for a 1 GHz resonator is reached at temperatures below TQ=45 mK, which can be achieved in a dilution refrigerator. The d.c. SQUID is known to be a near quantum-limited flux detector and flux sensitivities of are possible 22. For the current device is limited by the room- temperature amplifier. Thus, by reducing the amplifier noise floor by using, for example, a second d.c. SQUID as an amplifier and by increasing the flux responsivity of the first d.c. SQUID, the sensitivity may ultimately be improved by three orders of magnitude. Under these conditions, a 1 GHz resonator made of a 300-nm-long InAs beam with Q=1,000 will require a magnetic field of 1 T for the detector to reach quantum-limited sensitivity. Note that InAs is very suitable for such a resonator, as beams that are only tens of nanometres wide can still carry a substantial supercurrent23. d.c.-SQUID operation in the required high magnetic field may be possible by using narrow and thin Nb lines24. With these improvements, our flux-based measurement method can potentially be extended to detect the resonator’s ground state.
Methods
Device details
The Nb of the d.c.-SQUID loop and the stripline is evaporated (thickness 100 nm) onto a thin InAs–AlGaSb heterostructure that has been grown epitaxially on a GaAs(111)A substrate (see the Supplementary Information and ref. 25). The inner area of the loop is 40 μm×80 μm and the line width is 4 μm. The stripline is placed 1.5 μm from the d.c. SQUID and runs 70 μm parallel to the d.c.-SQUID loop. Weak links are formed at two points where the Nb is interrupted (Fig. 1b). At these points, the current flows through the InAs surface layer, thus forming an SNS-type Josephson junction26. A dry-etch is used to remove the conducting InAs layer everywhere except underneath the metallized parts and at the junctions. Electrical contact to the Nb is made by evaporation of 20 nm Ti and 200 nm Au. The flexural beam resonator is made by removing the GaAs substrate underneath part of the loop with a wet-etch. The resulting beam is buckled away from the substrate owing to compressive strain (Fig. 1c).
Measurement set-up
The device is mounted in a dilution refrigerator and the coarse magnetic field B is applied using a superconducting solenoid magnet. The low-frequency circuit is used to set the d.c. SQUID to a working point by applying a bias current IB through the d.c. SQUID and a current IF through the stripline. The battery-powered current sources and low-frequency voltage amplifier are optically isolated from mains-operated equipment. The high-frequency d.c.-SQUID output voltage at the resonator frequency is measured using a two-stage room-temperature amplifier with 80 dB gain, 10 kΩ input impedance and equivalent input voltage noise . The high-frequency and low-frequency circuits are separated by 1 kΩ resistors and 10 nF capacitors at the cryogenic stage (Fig. 1d).
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Acknowledgements
We thank Y. Blanter for discussions, T. Akazaki, H. Okamoto and K. Yamazaki for help with fabrication, R. Schouten for the measurement electronics and A. Bachtold and D. Sanchez-Garcia for advice on the dynamic force microscopy measurement. This work was supported in part by JSPS KAKENHI (20246064 and 18201018), FOM, a Dutch NWO VICI grant and NanoNed.
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Etaki, S., Poot, M., Mahboob, I. et al. Motion detection of a micromechanical resonator embedded in a d.c. SQUID. Nature Phys 4, 785–788 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1057
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1057
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