Tunable Phonon-Induced Transparency in Bilayer Graphene
Nanoribbons
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Abstract
In the phenomenon of plasmon-induced
transparency, which is a classical
analogue of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) in atomic
gases, the coherent interference between two plasmon modes results
in an optical transparency window in a broad absorption spectrum.
With the requirement of contrasting lifetimes, typically one of the
plasmon modes involved is a dark mode that has limited coupling to
the electromagnetic radiation and possesses relatively longer lifetime.
Plasmon-induced transparency not only leads to light transmission
at otherwise opaque frequency regions but also results in the slowing
of light group velocity and enhanced optical nonlinearity. In this
article, we report an analogous behavior, denoted as phonon-induced
transparency (PIT), in AB-stacked bilayer graphene nanoribbons. Here,
light absorption due to the plasmon excitation is suppressed in a
narrow window due to the coupling with the infrared active Γ-point
optical phonon, whose function here is similar to that of the dark
plasmon mode in the plasmon-induced transparency. We further show
that PIT in bilayer graphene is actively tunable by electrostatic
gating and estimate a maximum slow light factor of around 500 at the
phonon frequency of 1580 cm<sup>–1</sup>, based on the measured
spectra. Our demonstration opens an avenue for the exploration of
few-photon nonlinear optics and slow light in this novel two-dimensional
material