3D-printed components for quantum devices

被引:0
|
作者
R. Saint
W. Evans
Y. Zhou
T. Barrett
T. M. Fromhold
E. Saleh
I. Maskery
C. Tuck
R. Wildman
F. Oručević
P. Krüger
机构
[1] The University of Nottingham,School of Physics and Astronomy
[2] University of Sussex,Department of Physics and Astronomy
[3] University of Nottingham,Faculty of Engineering, EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing in Additive Manufacturing
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent advances in the preparation, control and measurement of atomic gases have led to new insights into the quantum world and unprecedented metrological sensitivities, e.g. in measuring gravitational forces and magnetic fields. The full potential of applying such capabilities to areas as diverse as biomedical imaging, non-invasive underground mapping, and GPS-free navigation can only be realised with the scalable production of efficient, robust and portable devices. We introduce additive manufacturing as a production technique of quantum device components with unrivalled design freedom and rapid prototyping. This provides a step change in efficiency, compactness and facilitates systems integration. As a demonstrator we present an ultrahigh vacuum compatible ultracold atom source dissipating less than ten milliwatts of electrical power during field generation to produce large samples of cold rubidium gases. This disruptive technology opens the door to drastically improved integrated structures, which will further reduce size and assembly complexity in scalable series manufacture of bespoke portable quantum devices.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] 3D-printed components for quantum devices
    Saint, R.
    Evans, W.
    Zhou, Y.
    Barrett, T.
    Fromhold, T. M.
    Saleh, E.
    Maskery, I.
    Tuck, C.
    Wildman, R.
    Orucevic, F.
    Kruger, P.
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2018, 8
  • [2] 3D-printed microfluidic devices
    Amin, Reza
    Knowlton, Stephanie
    Hart, Alexander
    Yenilmez, Bekir
    Ghaderinezhad, Fariba
    Katebifar, Sara
    Messina, Michael
    Khademhosseini, Ali
    Tasoglu, Savas
    [J]. BIOFABRICATION, 2016, 8 (02)
  • [3] 3D-printed bioanalytical devices
    Bishop, Gregory W.
    Satterwhite-Warden, Jennifer E.
    Kadimisetty, Karteek
    Rusling, James F.
    [J]. NANOTECHNOLOGY, 2016, 27 (28)
  • [4] Technology: 3D-Printed Components
    Busta, Hallie
    [J]. ARCHITECT, 2015, 104 (10): : 44 - 44
  • [5] 3D-printed optical active components
    Nair, S. Suresh
    Nuding, J.
    Heinrich, A.
    [J]. ORGANIC PHOTONIC MATERIALS AND DEVICES XX, 2018, 10529
  • [6] 3D-Printed Quantum Dot Nanopixels
    Bae, Jongcheon
    Lee, Sanghyeon
    Ahn, Jinhyuck
    Kim, Jung Hyun
    Wajahat, Muhammad
    Chang, Won Suk
    Yoon, Seog-Young
    Kim, Ji Tae
    Seol, Seung Kwon
    Pyo, Jaeyeon
    [J]. ACS NANO, 2020, 14 (09) : 10993 - 11001
  • [7] 3D-Printed Microfluidic Devices for Materials Science
    Alizadehgiashi, Moien
    Gevorkian, Albert
    Tebbe, Moritz
    Seo, Minseok
    Prince, Elisabeth
    Kumacheva, Eugenia
    [J]. ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES, 2018, 3 (07):
  • [8] Preventing the Failure of 3D-Printed Aerospace Components
    Daniel J. Thomas
    [J]. Journal of Failure Analysis and Prevention, 2022, 22 : 865 - 867
  • [9] 3D-Printed alternating current electroluminescent devices
    Brubaker, Cole D.
    Newcome, Kailey N.
    Jennings, G. Kane
    Adams, Douglas E.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C, 2019, 7 (19) : 5573 - 5578
  • [10] 3D-Printed Wearable Electrochemical Energy Devices
    Zhang, Shuai
    Liu, Yuqing
    Hao, Junnan
    Wallace, Gordon G.
    Beirne, Stephen
    Chen, Jun
    [J]. ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, 2022, 32 (03)