40 research outputs found
Giant optical anisotropy in transition metal dichalcogenides for next-generation photonics
Large optical anisotropy observed in a broad spectral range is of paramount
importance for efficient light manipulation in countless devices. Although a
giant anisotropy was recently observed in the mid-infrared wavelength range,
for visible and near-infrared spectral intervals, the problem remains acute
with the highest reported birefringence values of 0.8 in BaTiS3 and h-BN
crystals. This inspired an intensive search for giant optical anisotropy among
natural and artificial materials. Here, we demonstrate that layered transition
metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) provide an answer to this quest owing to their
fundamental differences between intralayer strong covalent bonding and weak
interlayer van der Walls interaction. To do this, we carried out a correlative
far- and near-field characterization validated by first-principle calculations
that reveals an unprecedented birefringence of 1.5 in the infrared and 3 in the
visible light for MoS2. Our findings demonstrate that this outstanding
anisotropy allows for tackling the diffraction limit enabling an avenue for
on-chip next-generation photonics.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Giant and tunable excitonic optical anisotropy in single-crystal CsPbX halide perovskites
During the last years, giant optical anisotropy demonstrated its paramount
importance for light manipulation which resulted in numerous applications
ranging from subdiffraction light guiding to switchable nanolasers. In spite of
recent advances in the field, achieving continuous tunability of optical
anisotropy remains an outstanding challenge. Here, we present a solution to the
problem through chemical alteration of the ratio of halogen atoms (X = Br or
Cl) in single-crystal CsPbX halide perovskites. It turns out that the
anisotropy originates from an excitonic resonance in the perovskite, which
spectral position and strength are determined by the halogens composition. As a
result, we manage to continually modify the optical anisotropy by 0.14. We also
discover that the halide perovskite can demonstrate optical anisotropy up to
0.6 in the visible range -- the largest value among non-van der Waals
materials. Moreover, our results reveal that this anisotropy could be in-plane
and out-of-plane, depending on perovskite shape -- rectangular and square.
Hence, it can serve as an additional degree of freedom for anisotropy
manipulation. As a practical demonstration, we created perovskite anisotropic
nanowaveguides and show a significant impact of anisotropy on high-order
guiding modes. These findings pave the way for halide perovskites as a
next-generation platform for tunable anisotropic photonics.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure