Optimizing Nanomechanical Resonators

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Abstract

The predominant influence of geometry and tensile stress on the Q factor of nanomechanical resonators is a phenomenon commonly described as dissipation dilution. In recent years, a variety of studies has looked into maximizing this effect, resulting in an assortment of softly-clamped resonator designs. This paper proposes a methodology that uses topology optimization (TO) to design nanomechanical structures with very high Q factors, by maximizing the effects of dissipation dilution. A novel equation, based on the tensile and bending energies of a prestressed finite element model, is proposed to capture this effect. Through adjoint sensitivity analysis, the sensitivity of this function with respect to (changes in) element-level design parameters was determined, which is a capability that is not available in commercial finite element packages. Furthermore, the absence of information required a priori to the optimization makes the proposed methodology versatile and easy to use. After verification of the equation and its sensitivity, it is used as an objective in TO to optimize resonator geometries inspired by state-of-the-art resonator designs. Given a thickness of 340nm and prestress of 1GPa, the final designs show a numerical Q × f0 that competes with optimized designs found in literature.