4.8 Article

Giant optical anisotropy in transition metal dichalcogenides for next-generation photonics

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21139-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation [0714-2020-0002]
  2. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [20-07-00475, 18-29-02089, 20-07-00840]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [MAT201788358-C3-3-R]
  4. Basque Department of Education [PIBA-2020-10014]
  5. European Research Council [715496]
  6. EU Graphene Flagship Core 3 [881603]
  7. EU Flagship Program 2D-SIPC Quantum Technology
  8. European Research Council Synergy Grant Hetero2D
  9. Royal Society
  10. EPSRC [EP/N010345/1, EP/P026850/1, EP/S030719/1]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Optical anisotropy is crucial for efficient light manipulation, and this study reveals that MoS2 possesses a huge birefringence of 1.5 in the infrared range and 3 in the visible light.
Large optical anisotropy observed in a broad spectral range is of paramount importance for efficient light manipulation in countless devices. Although a giant anisotropy has been 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 issue 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 Waals interaction. To do this, we made correlative far- and near-field characterizations validated by first-principle calculations that reveal a huge birefringence of 1.5 in the infrared and 3 in the visible light for MoS2. Our findings demonstrate that this remarkable anisotropy allows for tackling the diffraction limit enabling an avenue for on-chip next-generation photonics. Optical anisotropy in a broad spectral range is pivotal to efficient light manipulation. Here, the authors measure a birefringence of 1.5 in the infrared range and 3 in the visible light for MoS2.

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