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Analysis of two-level systems and mechanical loss of amorphous coatings by non-cage-breaking and cage-breaking transitions

ORAL

Abstract

Thermal noise from amorphous mirror coatings is one of the limiting noise sources for the laser interferometer gravitational-wave observatory (LIGO).[CQG 25.11,114041] In order to better understand the origin of the mechanical loss in amorphous coatings, their energy landscapes have been characterized by the correlated parameter distributions of two-level systems (TLS). By applying the concept of oxygen cage [J. Chem. Phys. 129, 164507 (2008)], the TLSs we find for pure and doped tantala can be separated into two groups named non-cage-breaking transitions and cage-breaking transitions. Non-cage-breaking transitions only have small structure changes, while cage-breaking transitions involve at least one large atom-atom pair distance change between the initial and final atomic structures. The further mechanical loss calculation of ZrO2-doped Ta2O5 models establish a connection between the atomic structure changes and mechanical loss, which shows that the non-cage-breaking transitions have higher averaged mechanical loss and are responsible for the large mechanical loss peak near 40K, while the cage-breaking transitions are the majority of transitions and mainly contributed to the loss peak near 120K.

Presenters

  • Jun Jiang

    University of Florida, Department of Physics, Center for Molecular Magnetic Quantum Materials and Quantum Theory Project, University of Florida

Authors

  • Jun Jiang

    University of Florida, Department of Physics, Center for Molecular Magnetic Quantum Materials and Quantum Theory Project, University of Florida

  • Alec Mishkin

    University of Florida

  • Kiran Prasai

    Stanford University

  • Rui Zhang

    University of Florida

  • Riccardo Bassiri

    Stanford University

  • Martin M Fejer

    Stanford University, E. L. Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University

  • Hai-Ping Cheng

    University of Florida, Department of Physics, Center for Molecular Magnetic Quantum Materials and Quantum Theory Project, University of Florida, Department of Physics, University of Florida, Physics, University of Florida