Spatiotemporal beating and vortices of van der Waals hyperbolic polaritons

Author:

Zhang Tianning12,Yan Qizhi12ORCID,Yang Xiaosheng12ORCID,Ma Weiliang12,Chen Runkun12,Zhang Xin12,Janzen Eli3,Edgar James H.3ORCID,Qiu Cheng-Wei4ORCID,Zhang Xinliang125,Li Peining12

Affiliation:

1. Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics and School of Optical and Electronic Information, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China

2. Optics Valley Laboratory, Wuhan 430074, China

3. Tim Taylor Department of Chemical Engineering, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506

4. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117583, Singapore

5. Office of the President, Xidian University, Xi’an 710126, China

Abstract

In conventional thin materials, the diffraction limit of light constrains the number of waveguide modes that can exist at a given frequency. However, layered van der Waals (vdW) materials, such as hexagonal boron nitride (hBN), can surpass this limitation due to their dielectric anisotropy, exhibiting positive permittivity along one optic axis and negativity along the other. This enables the propagation of hyperbolic rays within the material bulk and an unlimited number of subdiffractional modes characterized by hyperbolic dispersion. By employing time-domain near-field interferometry to analyze ultrafast hyperbolic ray pulses in thin hBN, we showed that their zigzag reflection trajectories bound within the hBN layer create an illusion of backward-moving and leaping behavior of pulse fringes. These rays result from the coherent beating of hyperbolic waveguide modes but could be mistakenly interpreted as negative group velocities and backward energy flow. Moreover, the zigzag reflections produce nanoscale (60 nm) and ultrafast (40 fs) spatiotemporal optical vortices along the trajectory, presenting opportunities to chiral spatiotemporal control of light–matter interactions. Supported by experimental evidence, our simulations highlight the potential of hyperbolic ray reflections for molecular vibrational absorption nanospectroscopy. The results pave the way for miniaturized, on-chip optical spectrometers, and ultrafast optical manipulation.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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