Nanopillar Optomechanical Cavities Pave the Way for Advanced Force Sensing and Biosensing Techniques

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Researchers from the H2020 FET-OPEN project STRETCHBio project, led by Prof. Albert Romano-Rodríguez (Micro and Nanotechnology and nanoscopies for Electronic and Electrophotonic Devices (MIND)), have made a significant leap in force sensing and biosensing technologies with their latest study published in ACS Nano, titled “Strong Cavity-Optomechanical Transduction of Nanopillar Motion.”

The study presents an innovative approach to transducing the motion of nanopillar resonators, which are key for ultra-sensitive force measurements. By engineering silicon nanopillars to achieve light confinement and creating an energy band gap in the near-infrared spectrum, the team developed high-quality optomechanical cavities. This advancement is a major contribution to the broader field of biosensing and force sensing, offering new possibilities for scalable, cost-effective solutions.

Strong Cavity-Optomechanical Transduction of Nanopillar Motion. Jaramillo-Fernandez J.; Poblet M.; Alonso-Tomás D.; Bertelsen C.V.; López-Aymerich E.; Arenas-Ortega D.; Svendsen W.E.; Capuj N.; Romano-Rodríguez A.; Navarro-Urrios D. ACS Nano, 18(35), pp. 24550–24557, 2024.

Source: Read more from STRETCHBio

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