Photonic crystals for nano-light in moiré graphene superlattices

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Abstract

Graphene is an atomically thin plasmonic medium that supports highly confined plasmon polaritons, or nano-light, with very low loss. Electronic properties of graphene can be drastically altered when it is laid upon another graphene layer, resulting in a moiré superlattice. The relative twist angle between the two layers is a key tuning parameter of the interlayer coupling in thus-obtained twisted bilayer graphene (TBG). We studied the propagation of plasmon polaritons in TBG by infrared nano-imaging. We discovered that the atomic reconstruction occurring at small twist angles transforms the TBG into a natural plasmon photonic crystal for propagating nano-light. This discovery points to a pathway for controlling nano-light by exploiting quantum properties of graphene and other atomically layered van der Waals materials, eliminating the need for arduous top-down nanofabrication.

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Sunku, S. S., Ni, G. X., Jiang, B. Y., Yoo, H., Sternbach, A., McLeod, A. S., … Basov, D. N. (2018). Photonic crystals for nano-light in moiré graphene superlattices. Science, 362(6419), 1153–1156. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aau5144

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