| Literature DB >> 34163053 |
Wenyu Zhao1, Sihan Zhao1, Hongyuan Li1,2,3, Sheng Wang1,3, Shaoxin Wang1, M Iqbal Bakti Utama1,3,4, Salman Kahn1,3, Yue Jiang1,5, Xiao Xiao1,5, SeokJae Yoo1, Kenji Watanabe6, Takashi Taniguchi7, Alex Zettl1,3,8, Feng Wang9,10,11.
Abstract
Fizeau demonstrated in 1850 that the speed of light can be modified when it is propagating in moving media1. However, such control of the light speed has not been achieved efficiently with a fast-moving electron media by passing an electrical current. Because the strong electromagnetic coupling between the electron and light leads to the collective excitation of plasmon polaritons, it is hypothesized that Fizeau drag in electron flow systems manifests as a plasmonic Doppler effect. Experimental observation of the plasmonic Doppler effect in electronic systems has been challenge because the plasmon propagation speed is much faster than the electron drift velocity in conventional noble metals. Here we report direct observation of Fizeau drag of plasmon polaritons in strongly biased monolayer graphene by exploiting the high electron mobility and the slow plasmon propagation of massless Dirac electrons. The large bias current in graphene creates a fast-drifting Dirac electron medium hosting the plasmon polariton. This results in non-reciprocal plasmon propagation, where plasmons moving with the drifting electron media propagate at an enhanced speed. We measure the Doppler-shifted plasmon wavelength using cryogenic near-field infrared nanoscopy, which directly images the plasmon polariton mode in the biased graphene at low temperature. We observe a plasmon wavelength difference of up to 3.6 per cent between a plasmon moving with and a plasmon moving against the drifting electron media. Our findings on the plasmonic Doppler effect provide opportunities for electrical control of non-reciprocal surface plasmon polaritons in non-equilibrium systems.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34163053 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03574-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962