| Literature DB >> 32807920 |
Ning Li1,2,3,4, Xiangdong Guo1,4,5,6, Xiaoxia Yang7,8, Ruishi Qi2, Tianyu Qiao2, Yifei Li9, Ruochen Shi2,3, Yuehui Li2,3, Kaihui Liu6,10, Zhi Xu11, Lei Liu9, F Javier García de Abajo12,13, Qing Dai14,15, En-Ge Wang2,10,11,16, Peng Gao17,18,19,20.
Abstract
Phonon polaritons enable light confinement at deep subwavelength scales, with potential technological applications, such as subdiffraction imaging, sensing and engineering of spontaneous emission. However, the trade-off between the degree of confinement and the excitation efficiency of phonon polaritons prevents direct observation of these modes in monolayer hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), where they are expected to reach ultrahigh confinement. Here, we use monochromatic electron energy-loss spectroscopy (about 7.5 meV energy resolution) in a scanning transmission electron microscope to measure phonon polaritons in monolayer h-BN, directly demonstrating the existence of these modes as the phonon Reststrahlen band (RS) disappears. We find phonon polaritons in monolayer h-BN to exhibit high confinement (>487 times smaller wavelength than that of light in free space) and ultraslow group velocity down to about 10-5c. The large momentum compensation provided by electron beams additionally allows us to excite phonon polaritons over nearly the entire RS band of multilayer h-BN. These results open up a broad range of opportunities for the engineering of metasurfaces and strongly enhanced light-matter interactions.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32807920 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-020-0763-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841