intercalando átomos de sodio en los llamados materiales de van der Waals. El avance se podría aplicar en tecnologías de la información y sensores biológicos de alta sensibilidad. SINC 4/5/2020 10:47 CEST
The biaxial van der Waals semiconductor α‐phase molybdenum trioxide (α‐MoO3) has recently received significant attention due to its ability to support highly anisotropic phonon polaritons (PhPs)—infrared (IR) light coupled to lattice vibrations—offering an unprecedented platform for controlling the flow of energy at the nanoscale. However, to fully exploit the extraordinary IR response of this material, an accurate dielectric function is required. Here, the accurate IR dielectric function of α‐MoO3 is reported by modeling far‐field polarized IR reflectance spectra acquired on a single thick flake of this material. Unique to this work, the far‐field model is refined by contrasting the experimental dispersion and damping of PhPs, revealed by polariton interferometry using scattering‐type scanning near‐field optical microscopy (s‐SNOM) on thin flakes of α‐MoO3, with analytical and transfer‐matrix calculations, as well as full‐wave simulations. Through these correlative efforts, exceptional quantitative agreement is attained to both far‐ and near‐field properties for multiple flakes, thus providing strong verification of the accuracy of this model, while offering a novel approach to extracting dielectric functions of nanomaterials. In addition, by employing density functional theory (DFT), insights into the various vibrational states dictating the dielectric function model and the intriguing optical properties of α‐MoO3 are provided.
Recent
discoveries have shown that, when two layers of van der
Waals (vdW) materials are superimposed with a relative twist angle
between them, the electronic properties of the coupled system can
be dramatically altered. Here, we demonstrate that a similar concept
can be extended to the optics realm, particularly to propagating phonon
polaritons–hybrid light-matter interactions. To do this, we
fabricate stacks composed of two twisted slabs of a vdW crystal (α-MoO3) supporting anisotropic phonon polaritons (PhPs), and image
the propagation of the latter when launched by localized sources.
Our images reveal that, under a critical angle, the PhPs isofrequency
curve undergoes a topological transition, in which the propagation
of PhPs is strongly guided (canalization regime) along predetermined
directions without geometric spreading. These results demonstrate
a new degree of freedom (twist angle) for controlling the propagation
of polaritons at the nanoscale with potential for nanoimaging, (bio)-sensing,
or heat management.
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