Presentation by A. Callegari at SPIE-MNM, San Diego, 23 August 2023

An illustration of microscopic gold flakes on surface. (Image by F. Schmidt.)
Tunable critical Casimir forces counteract Casimir–Lifshitz attraction
Falko Schmidt, Agnese Callegari, Abdallah Daddi-Moussa-Ider, Battulga Munkhbat, Ruggero Verre, Timur Shegai, Mikael Käll, Hartmut Löwen, Andrea Gambassi and Giovanni Volpe
SPIE-MNM, San Diego, CA, USA, 20 – 24 August 2023
Date: 23 August 2023

Casimir forces in quantum electrodynamics emerge between microscopic metallic objects because of the confinement of the vacuum electromagnetic fluctuations occurring even at zero temperature. Their generalization at finite temperature and in material media are referred to as Casimir–Lifshitz forces. These forces are typically attractive, leading to the widespread problem of stiction between the metallic parts of micro- and nanodevices. Recently, repulsive Casimir forces have been experimentally realized but their reliance on specialized materials prevents their dynamic control and thus limits their further applicability. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that repulsive critical Casimir forces, which emerge in a critical binary liquid mixture upon approaching the critical temperature, can be used to actively control microscopic and nanoscopic objects with nanometer precision. We demonstrate this by using critical Casimir forces to prevent the stiction caused by the Casimir–Lifshitz forces. We study a microscopic gold flake above a flat gold-coated substrate immersed in a critical mixture. Far from the critical temperature, stiction occurs because of dominant Casimir–Lifshitz forces. Upon approaching the critical temperature, we observe the emergence of repulsive critical Casimir forces that are sufficiently strong to counteract stiction. Our method provides a novel way of controlling the distances of micro- and nanostructures using tunable critical Casimir forces to counteract forces such as the Casimir–Lifshitz force, thereby preventing stiction and device failure. Due to the simplicity of our design the concept can be adapted to already existing MEMS and NEMS by, for example, controlling the temperature via light illumination.

Reference
Falko Schmidt, Agnese Callegari, Abdallah Daddi-Moussa-Ider, Battulga Munkhbat, Ruggero Verre, Timur Shegai, Mikael Käll, Hartmut Löwen, Andrea Gambassi and Giovanni Volpe, Tunable critical Casimir forces counteract Casimir-Lifshitz attraction, Nature Physics 19, 271-278 (2023)

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