U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) scientists, in collaboration
with researchers from the University of Manchester, U.K.; Imperial
College, London; University of California San Diego; and the National
Institute of Material Science (NIMS), Japan, have demonstrated that
confined surface phonon polaritons within hexagonal boron nitride (hBN)
exhibit unique metamaterial properties that enable novel nanoscale
optical devices for use in optical communications, super-resolution
imaging, and improved infrared cameras and detectors. Metamaterials are
artificial composites of various materials designed to exhibit optical
properties not anticipated in nature. One such property is
hyperbolicity, whereby a material exhibits both metallic- and
dielectric-like optical responses simultaneously along different crystal
axes. These hyperbolic metamaterials are the basis for many potential
applications such as 'hyperlenses,' used for imaging of nanoscale
objects not observable using conventional optics.
"Our examination into the characteristics of hBN reveal the first
experimental observation of sub-diffractional guided waves confined in
all three dimensions, using a natural hyperbolic material," said Joshua
Caldwell, Ph.D., Electronics Science and Technology Division, Power
Electronics Branch. "This may, in turn, lead to the development of
disruptive technologies such as the nanoscale equivalent of an optical
fiber due to the volume-bound confinement of sub-diffractional modes
within hBN."
Optic phonons, or crystal vibrations that can be excited with
infrared light, can also be used to confine light to dimensions much
smaller than the wavelength of light, while maintaining record-high
efficiencies. These surface phonon polaritons are analogous to electron
oscillations in metals or doped-semiconductors, called plasmons, but
offer the benefit of low losses and operation in the infrared to
terahertz spectral regions.
As a van der Waels crystal -- a layered crystal structure similar to
graphene or graphite -- hBN was demonstrated to be two orders of
magnitude more efficient than hyperbolic metamaterials shown to date,
says Caldwell. Unlike metallic/dielectric hyperbolic metamaterials, hBN
also provides the additional functionality of both types of
hyperbolicity, allowing both the in-plane and out-of-plane crystal axes
to behave metallic- (reflective) or dielectric-like (transparent) simply
by changing the wavelength of the exciting light. This mixing of both
types of hyperbolic behavior is to this point unique and allowed the
fundamental comparison of antennas within these two regimes.
Using the natural hyperbolic behavior of hBN, the researchers were
able to demonstrate that light could also be confined within optical
antennas -- up to 86 times smaller than the wavelength of light, for
instance confinement of 6.8 micrometers of light into a 0.08 micrometer
tall antenna -- while maintaining record-high efficiencies due to the
low-loss nature of the dielectric crystal.
The researchers were able to further demonstrate that the resonance
wavelength of the hyperbolic polaritons confined within these antennae
was dependent only upon the aspect ratio (height/diameter), and was
nominally independent upon the actual size and/or shape -- demonstrating
that antennas could be defined for a given application simply by
controlling this ratio, thereby making them compatible to a wide array
of device form-factors. This could enable frequency selective operation
and nanophotonic circuits, as well as provide an operational material
for mid-infrared imaging of nanoscale objects.
The research team also demonstrated that the resonance response
exhibited not a single mode, but four separate series, and according to
Caldwell, a change in the wavelength and/or the angle of the incoming
light with respect to the sample surface could isolate each series,
providing the first complete description of these novel,
three-dimensionally confined hyperbolic polariton modes.
Further discoveries found these breakthroughs could have an impact in
areas such as enhanced infrared or molecular spectroscopy, improved
functionality for nanophotonic circuits and devices for use in infrared
cameras, detectors and weapons guidance systems, and tailored thermal
emission sources.
The NRL Power Electronics Branch serves as the laboratory's principal
resource for the science and technology of solid-state high-power
electronic devices. The primary mission of the branch is to conduct
research and development (R&D) programs in solid state electronics
and related technologies that support U.S. Navy and Department of
Defense (DoD) interests and capabilities in the full range of new
weapons capabilities enabled by high-power solid state electronic
devices. Moreover, the branch serves as the focal point of insertion of
power electronics technology into Navy engineering development efforts.
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