Plasmons in quasi-two-dimensional metals

ORAL

Abstract

We employ ab initio density-functional theory (DFT) and GW calculations to understand and predict the plasmon dispersion in quasi-two-dimensional (quasi-2D) metals. We show that, unlike what is found in idealized 2D electron gases, plasmons are virtually dispersionless in real quasi-2D metals for a wide range of excitation wave vectors that are experimentally accessible. We further develop a simpler model that captures this plasmon dispersion in quasi-2D metals and which depends on a single parameter: the characteristic screening length due to interband transitions. Our ab initio calculations further predict that monolayer metallic transition metal dichalcogenides are excellent candidates to explore these dispersionless (flat) plasmons: having large excitation energy that is away from the Landau damping regions makes them ideal systems to support long-lived, spatially-localized 2D plasmons which are highly tunable with substrate. This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division; the National Science Foundation; the European Research Council project (ERC-2015-AdG-694097), and the AFOSR Grant No. FA2386-15-1-0006 AOARD 144088.

Authors

  • Felipe H. da Jornada

    • UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
    • University of California at Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
    • Dept. of Physics, University of California Berkeley; Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, CA, USA
  • Lede Xian

    • Univ. of the Basque Country
  • H. Sener Sen

    • Univ. of the Basque Country
  • Angel Rubio

    • Univ. of the Basque Country and Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter
  • Steven G. Louie

    • Department of Physics, UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
    • UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
    • University of California at Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
    • Physics Department, UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
    • Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    • Univ of California - Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab