Low temperature and high magnetic field performance of a commercial piezo-actuator probed $via$ laser interferometry
R. Adhikari, K. Doesinger, P. Linder, B. Faina, and A. Bonanni

TL;DR
This study characterizes the performance of a commercial piezoelectric-actuator at cryogenic temperatures and high magnetic fields using laser interferometry, providing valuable data for its application in quantum materials research.
Contribution
It presents a novel interferometric setup to measure piezoelectric-actuator behavior under cryogenic and high magnetic field conditions, which was previously lacking.
Findings
Maximum displacement reduces from 30 μm at room temperature to 1.2 μm at 2 K
Hysteresis at 2 K is approximately 9.1 nm
Magnetic field up to 6 T has negligible effect on piezo properties
Abstract
The advances in the fields of scanning probe microscopy, scanning tunneling spectroscopy, point contact spectroscopy and point contact Andreev reflection spectroscopy to study the properties of conventional and quantum materials at cryogenic conditions have prompted the development of nanopositioners and nanoscanners with enhanced spatial resolution. Piezoelectric-actuator stacks as nanopositioners with working strokes and positioning resolution (1-10) nm are desirable for both basic research and industrial applications. However, information on the performance of most commercial piezoelectric-actuators in cryogenic environment and in the presence of magnetic fields in excess of 5\,T is generally not available. In particular, the magnitude, rate and the associated hysteresis of the piezo-displacement at cryogenic temperatures are the most relevant parameters…
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