Optimisation and artifacts of photothermal excitation of microresonators
Liping Kevin Ge, Alessandro Tuniz, Martijn de Sterke, James M., Zavislan, Thomas G. Brown, Sascha Martin, David Martinez-Martin

TL;DR
This paper investigates the efficiency of photothermal excitation of microresonators, revealing how beam position and laser emission characteristics influence the conversion of light into mechanical motion in different environments.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how photothermal efficiency varies along the beam axis and identifies factors affecting excitation effectiveness in microresonators.
Findings
Photothermal efficiency varies along the beam axis.
Far out-of-band laser emission reduces efficiency.
Beam waist is not always at the highest efficiency point.
Abstract
The excitation of microresonators using focused intensity modulated light, known as photothermal excitation, is gaining significant attention due to its capacity to accurately excite microresonators without distortions, even in liquid environments, which is driving key advancements in atomic force microscopy and related technologies. Despite progress in the development of coatings, the conversion of light into mechanical movement remains largely inefficient, limiting resonator movements to tens of nanometres even when milliwatts of optical power are used. Moreover, how photothermal efficiency depends on the relative position of a microresonator along the propagation axis of the photothermal beam remains poorly studied, hampering our understanding of the conversion of light into mechanical motion. Here, we perform photothermal measurements in air and water using cantilever…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Photonic and Optical Devices · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
