Low-loss twist-tunable in-plane anisotropic polaritonic crystals
Van der Waals (vdW) materials supporting phonon polaritons (PhPs) - light coupled to lattice vibrations - have gathered significant interest because of their intrinsic anisotropy and low losses. In particular, $\alpha$-MoO$_3$ supports PhPs with in-plane anisotropic propagation, which has been explo...
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Zusammenfassung: | Van der Waals (vdW) materials supporting phonon polaritons (PhPs) - light
coupled to lattice vibrations - have gathered significant interest because of
their intrinsic anisotropy and low losses. In particular, $\alpha$-MoO$_3$
supports PhPs with in-plane anisotropic propagation, which has been exploited
to tune the optical response of twisted bilayers and trilayers. Additionally,
various studies have explored the realization of polaritonic crystals (PCs) -
lattices with periods comparable to the polariton wavelength -. PCs consisting
of hole arrays etched in $\alpha$-MoO$_3$ slabs exhibit Bragg resonances
dependent on the angle between the crystallographic axes and the lattice
vectors. However, such PC concept, with a fixed orientation and size of its
geometrical parameters, constrains practical applications and introduces
additional scattering losses due to invasive fabrication processes. Here we
demonstrate a novel PC concept that overcomes these limitations, enabling
low-loss optical tuning. It comprises a rotatable pristine $\alpha$-MoO$_3$
layer located on a periodic hole array fabricated in a metallic layer. Our
design prevents degradation of the $\alpha$-MoO$_3$ optical properties caused
by fabrication, preserving its intrinsic low-loss and in-plane anisotropic
propagation of PhPs. The resulting PC exhibits rotation of the Bloch modes,
which is experimentally visualized by scanning near-field microscopy. In
addition, we experimentally determine the polaritons momentum and reconstruct
their band structure. These results pave the way for mechanically tunable
nanooptical components based on polaritons for potential lasing, sensing, or
energy harvesting applications. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.07861 |