Colossal Optical Anisotropy from Atomic‐Scale Modulations

Author:

Mei Hongyan1ORCID,Ren Guodong2,Zhao Boyang3,Salman Jad1,Jung Gwan Yeong4,Chen Huandong3,Singh Shantanu3,Thind Arashdeep S.2,Cavin John5,Hachtel Jordan A.6,Chi Miaofang6,Niu Shanyuan3,Joe Graham1,Wan Chenghao17,Settineri Nick8,Teat Simon J.8,Chakoumakos Bryan C.9,Ravichandran Jayakanth31011ORCID,Mishra Rohan245ORCID,Kats Mikhail A.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI 53706 USA

2. Institute of Materials Science and Engineering Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis MO 63130 USA

3. Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science University of Southern California Los Angeles CA 90089 USA

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering and Material Science Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis MO 63130 USA

5. Department of Physics Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis MO 63130 USA

6. Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN 37831 USA

7. Department of Materials Science and Engineering University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI 53706 USA

8. Advanced Light Source Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley CA 94720 USA

9. Neutron Scattering Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN 37831 USA

10. Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical Engineering University of Southern California Los Angeles CA 90089 USA

11. Core Center for Excellence in NanoImaging University of Southern California Los Angeles CA 90089 USA

Abstract

AbstractMaterials with large birefringence (Δn, where n is the refractive index) are sought after for polarization control (e.g., in wave plates, polarizing beam splitters, etc.), nonlinear optics, micromanipulation, and as a platform for unconventional light–matter coupling, such as hyperbolic phonon polaritons. Layered 2D materials can feature some of the largest optical anisotropy; however, their use in most optical systems is limited because their optical axis is out of the plane of the layers and the layers are weakly attached. This work demonstrates that a bulk crystal with subtle periodic modulations in its structure—Sr9/8TiS3—is transparent and positive‐uniaxial, with extraordinary index ne = 4.5 and ordinary index no = 2.4 in the mid‐ to far‐infrared. The excess Sr, compared to stoichiometric SrTiS3, results in the formation of TiS6 trigonal‐prismatic units that break the chains of face‐sharing TiS6 octahedra in SrTiS3 into periodic blocks of five TiS6 octahedral units. The additional electrons introduced by the excess Sr form highly oriented electron clouds, which selectively boost the extraordinary index ne and result in record birefringence (Δn > 2.1 with low loss). The connection between subtle structural modulations and large changes in refractive index suggests new categories of anisotropic materials and also tunable optical materials with large refractive‐index modulation.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

National Science Foundation

Army Research Office

Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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