Topological polaritons and photonic magic angles in twisted α-MoO3 bilayers

Guangwei Hu(The Graduate Center, CUNY), Qingdong Ou(ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies), Guangyuan Si(Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication), Yingjie Wu(ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies), Jing Wu(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Zhigao Dai(ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies), Alex Krasnok(The Graduate Center, CUNY), Yarden Mazor(The University of Texas at Austin), Qing Zhang(National University of Singapore), Qiaoliang Bao(ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies), Cheng‐Wei Qiu(National University of Singapore), Andrea Alù(The Graduate Center, CUNY)
RePEc: Research Papers in Economics
January 1, 2000
Cited by 600

Abstract

Abstract Twisted two-dimensional bilayer materials exhibit many exotic electronic phenomena. Manipulating the ‘twist angle’ between the two layers enables fine control of the electronic band structure, resulting in magic-angle flat-band superconductivity1, 2, the formation of moiré excitons3–8 and interlayer magnetism9. However, there are limited demonstrations of such concepts for photons. Here we show how analogous principles, combined with extreme anisotropy, enable control and manipulation of the photonic dispersion of phonon polaritons in van der Waals bilayers. We experimentally observe tunable topological transitions from open (hyperbolic) to closed (elliptical) dispersion contours in bilayers of α-phase molybdenum trioxide (α-MoO3), arising when the rotation between the layers is at a photonic magic twist angle. These transitions are induced by polariton hybridization and are controlled by a topological quantity. At the transitions the bilayer dispersion flattens, exhibiting low-loss tunable polariton canalization and diffractionless propagation with a resolution of less than λ0/40, where λ0 is the free-space wavelength. Our findings extend twistronics10 and moiré physics to nanophotonics and polaritonics, with potential applications in nanoimaging, nanoscale light propagation, energy transfer and quantum physics.


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