Field-Effect Induced Linear Dichroism in Black Phosphorus from the Visible to Mid-Infrared

ORAL

Abstract

The incorporation of electrically tunable materials into photonic structures such as waveguides and metasurfaces enables dynamic control of light propagation, a critical functionality for emerging optical technologies. Atomically-thin, 2D crystals are ideal materials for this application, as their optical properties are modulated effectively by electrostatic gating. Few-layer black phosphorus is uniquely promising, as its absorption edge is tunable with thickness from the visible to the mid-infrared, and its optoelectronic properties exhibit strong anisotropy within the Van der Waals plane.

In this Abstract we report the first demonstration of broadband, electrically tunable dichroism, observed here in few-layer black phosphorus. By exploiting the quantum-confined Stark effect, Burstein-Moss shift, and selection rules for forbidden transitions under application of an external electric field, we are able to control the material intersubband absorbance along the armchair axis and, consequently, the in-plane optical anisotropy. This behavior persists from the band gap energy (~0.3 eV) to the visible (1.8 eV), and we observe large BP oscillator strength modulation, approaching unity for some combinations of frequency and BP thickness.

Presenters

  • William Whitney

    California Institute of Technology

Authors

  • William Whitney

    California Institute of Technology

  • Michelle Sherrott

    California Institute of Technology

  • Deep Jariwala

    Caltech, California Institute of Technology

  • Cora Went

    California Institute of Technology

  • Joeson Wong

    Caltech, California Institute of Technology

  • George Rossman

    California Institute of Technology

  • Harry Atwater

    Caltech, Applied Physics and Materials Science, California Institute of Technology, California Institute of Technology, Thomas J. Watson Laboratory of Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology, Applied Physics and Material Science, Caltech, Thomas J. Watson Laboratories of Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology, Applied Physics and Materials Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Applied Physics and Material Science, California Institute of Technology