Probing optical anisotropy of van der Waals materials with nano-infrared spectroscopy

ORAL

Abstract

Anisotropic dielectric tensors of uniaxial van der Waals (vdW) materials are notoriously difficult to investigate at infrared frequencies. The small dimensions of high-quality exfoliated crystals prevent the practical use of diffraction-limited spectroscopies. Near-field microscopes coupled to broadband lasers can function as Fourier transform infrared spectrometers with nanometric spatial resolution (nano-FTIR). While dielectric functions of isotropic materials can be readily extracted from nano-FTIR spectra, the in- and out-of-plane permittivities of anisotropic vdW crystals cannot be easily distinguished. We show how to separate the in- and out-of-plane contributions by exploiting the information in the screening of substrate resonances by vdW crystals. As an example, we determine the dielectric tensor of a bulk 2H-WSe2 microcrystal in the mid-IR and demonstrate how to quantify the uncertainty on the extracted permittivities using likelihood-based confidence intervals.

*This work was supported as part of the Center for Novel Pathways to Quantum Coherence in Materials, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences.

Presenters

  • Francesco Ruta

    • Department of Physics, Columbia University
    • Columbia University
    • Columbia Univ

Authors

  • Francesco Ruta

    • Department of Physics, Columbia University
    • Columbia University
    • Columbia Univ
  • Aaron Sternbach

    • Department of Physics, Columbia University
    • Columbia University
    • Columbia Univ
  • Adji B Dieng

    • Department of Statistics, Columbia University
  • Alexander McLeod

    • Columbia University
    • Department of Physics, Columbia University
    • Columbia Univ
    • Physics, Columbia University
  • Dmitri Basov

    • Columbia University
    • Department of Physics, Columbia University
    • Physics, Columbia University
    • Columbia Univ