| Literature DB >> 29451802 |
Lisa V Brown1,2, Marcelo Davanco1, Zhiyuan Sun3, Andrey Kretinin4, Yiguo Chen5,6, Joseph R Matson7, Igor Vurgaftman8, Nicholas Sharac9, Alexander J Giles8, Michael M Fogler3, Takashi Taniguchi10, Kenji Watanabe10, Kostya S Novoselov4, Stefan A Maier5,11, Andrea Centrone1, Joshua D Caldwell7,8.
Abstract
The inherent crystal anisotropy of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) provides the ability to support hyperbolic phonon polaritons, that is, polaritons that can propagate with very large wave vectors within the material volume, thereby enabling optical confinement to exceedingly small dimensions. Indeed, previous research has shown that nanometer-scale truncated nanocone hBN cavities, with deep subdiffractional dimensions, support three-dimensionally confined optical modes in the mid-infrared. Because of optical selection rules, only a few of the many theoretically predicted modes have been observed experimentally via far-field reflection and scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM). The photothermal induced resonance (PTIR) technique probes optical and vibrational resonances overcoming weak far-field emission by leveraging an atomic force microscope (AFM) probe to transduce local sample expansion caused by light absorption. Here we show that PTIR enables the direct observation of previously unobserved, dark hyperbolic modes of hBN nanostructures. Leveraging these optical modes and their wide range of angular and radial momenta could provide a new degree of control over the electromagnetic near-field concentration, polarization in nanophotonic applications.Entities:
Keywords: Hyperbolic; PTIR; SNOM; hexagonal boron nitride; nonradiative; phonon polariton
Year: 2018 PMID: 29451802 PMCID: PMC6140337 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b04476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189