Tags - (4) phononic crystal

Department(s)/lab(s): Electrical Engineering / QET Labs | Balram Lab @ Bristol
Summary:

Krishna Balram (inaugural lecture May 2026) develops photonic quantum engineering at the intersection of photonics, mechanics, and quantum information. Research: (1) piezoelectric optomechanical resonators (GaAs, AlN) for microwave-optical quantum transduction; (2) photonic integrated circuits for quantum sensing; (3) on-chip phononic and photonic crystal devices. Focuses on enabling technologies for quantum repeater nodes and sensors.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics / Institute of Photonics and Optical Science | Eggleton Research Group @ USyd
Summary:

Merklein is the independent PI within the Eggleton group most focused on the acoustic side of Brillouin physics: he demonstrated on-chip photon-phonon memory (coherently transferring an optical pulse into a long-lived acoustic excitation and back), and works on distributed Brillouin sensing in optical fibre and on the coherent control of travelling acoustic waves in waveguides. The distributed-sensing thread is a practical, sensitivity-limited measurement problem: recovering strain and temperature along kilometres of fibre from a very weak backscattered signal. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — phonon-mediated storage and readout is a complementary transduction channel to spin-based sensing, and the group is now pushing toward the quantum regime where the acoustic mode must be treated as a quantum object rather than a classical one. Early-career PI (DECRA) with genuine independence inside a large group.

Department(s)/lab(s): Applied Physics | Safavi-Naeini Lab @ Stanford
Summary:

Safavi-Naeini's group engineers nanoscale optomechanical and electromechanical devices -- phononic-crystal membranes and superconducting-circuit-coupled resonators -- for quantum-limited force and displacement sensing and for coherent microwave-to-optical quantum transduction linking superconducting qubits to photonic quantum networks.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics / Niels Bohr Institute | Quantum Optomechanics Group (Schliesser Lab) @ UCPH
Summary:

Albert Schliesser's group engineers ultracoherent phononic crystal membrane resonators with dissipation-dilution Q>10^9 and uses them for quantum optomechanics: ground-state cooling, back-action-evading measurement, optical quantum memory for single photons, and microwave-optical quantum transduction. Recent work has demonstrated a soft-clamped topological phononic waveguide (Nature 2025) and scanning force microscopy below the standard quantum limit. The group bridges fundamental quantum physics with novel sensors for electromagnetic fields and forces, and mechanical interfaces for hybrid quantum networks.