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Metasurface of Strongly Coupled Excitons and Nanoplasmonic Arrays

Farsane Tabataba‐Vakili, Lukas Krelle, Lukas Husel, Huy P. G. Nguyen, Zhijie Li, Ismail Bilgin, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Alexander Högele

2024Nano Letters15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High Resolution Image Download MS PowerPoint Slide Metasurfaces allow light to be manipulated at the nanoscale. Integrating metasurfaces with transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers provides additional functionality to ultrathin optics, including tunable optical properties with enhanced light–matter interactions. In this work, we demonstrate the realization of a polaritonic metasurface utilizing the sizable light–matter coupling of excitons in monolayer WSe 2 and the collective lattice resonances of nanoplasmonic gold arrays. We developed a novel fabrication method to integrate gold nanodisk arrays in hexagonal boron nitride and thus simultaneously ensure spectrally narrow exciton transitions and their immediate proximity to the near-field of array surface lattice resonances. In the regime of strong light–matter coupling, the resulting van der Waals metasurface exhibits all key characteristics of lattice polaritons, with a directional and linearly polarized far-field emission profile dictated by the underlying nanoplasmonic lattice. Our work can be straightforwardly adapted to other lattice geometries, establishing structured van der Waals metasurfaces as means to engineer polaritonic lattices.

Topics & Concepts

ExcitonMonolayerPlasmonNanoscopic scaleMaterials scienceOptoelectronicsRealization (probability)Coupling (piping)NanotechnologyVisible spectrumNanophotonicsPhysicsCondensed matter physicsMetallurgyMathematicsStatisticsStrong Light-Matter Interactions2D Materials and ApplicationsMetamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications
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