Efficient Reduction of Casimir Forces by Self-assembled Bio-molecular Thin Films
Ren\'e I.P. Sedmik, Alexander Urech, Zeev Zalevsky, Itai Carmeli

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that self-assembled bio-molecular thin films can significantly reduce Casimir forces between surfaces, offering a practical method to control quantum vacuum effects at the nanoscale for MEMS applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental approach showing molecular thin films can tune Casimir forces, with potential for device miniaturization.
Findings
Molecular films reduce Casimir force by up to 14%
Spectroscopic data link force reduction to absorption bands
Force reduction is tunable by stacking multiple monolayers
Abstract
Casimir forces, related to London-van der Waals forces, arise if the spectrum of electromagnetic fluctuations is restricted by boundaries. There is great interest both from fundamental science and technical applications to control these forces on the nano scale. Scientifically, the Casimir effect being the only known quantum vacuum effect manifesting between macroscopic objects, allows to investigate the poorly known physics of the vacuum. In this work, we experimentally investigate the influence of self-assembled molecular bio and organic thin films on the Casimir force between a plate and a sphere. We find that molecular thin films, despite being a mere few nanometers thick, reduce the Casimir force by up to 14%. To identify the molecular characteristics leading to this reduction, five different bio-molecular films with varying chemical and physical properties were investigated.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
