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Publication | Open Access

Colossal Optical Anisotropy from Atomic‐Scale Modulations

37

Citations

49

References

2023

Year

Abstract

Materials 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-Sr<sub>9/8</sub> TiS<sub>3</sub> -is transparent and positive-uniaxial, with extraordinary index n<sub>e</sub> = 4.5 and ordinary index n<sub>o</sub> = 2.4 in the mid- to far-infrared. The excess Sr, compared to stoichiometric SrTiS<sub>3</sub> , results in the formation of TiS<sub>6</sub> trigonal-prismatic units that break the chains of face-sharing TiS<sub>6</sub> octahedra in SrTiS<sub>3</sub> into periodic blocks of five TiS<sub>6</sub> octahedral units. The additional electrons introduced by the excess Sr form highly oriented electron clouds, which selectively boost the extraordinary index n<sub>e</sub> 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.

References

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