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Probing Phonon Polaritons in Boron Nitride Nanotubes with Thermal Emission Spectroscopy

ORAL

Abstract

In polaritonic dielectric materials, optically active phonons cause the coupling between electromagnetic waves and the vibrational motions of the polar lattice, leading to phonon polaritons, coupled oscillations of light and matter. Thermally exciting such materials leads to strong fluctuating optical dipole moments and unique thermal emission characteristics in well-defined spectral regions. Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) is an emerging 2D material that possesses high-frequency and low-loss optical phonons in two spectrally distinct mid-infrared frequency bands. The hyperbolic nature of these frequency bands leads to a large local density of states (LDOS). However, in 2D form, the polaritonic states are dark modes, bound to the material. In this study, by exploiting the cylindrical form of hBN, i.e. boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs), we create subwavelength particles capable of coupling these dark modes to radiative ones. Through direct measurement of thermal emission of a disordered system of BNNTs, we confirm their radiative polaritonic modes and show that the antenna behavior can be observed even in a disordered system.

Publication: High-Temperature Thermal Photonics, Annual Review of Heat Transfer 23, 355-395, 2, 2020; <br>High-Temperature Polaritons in Ceramic Nanotube Antennas, Nano letters 19 (12), 8565-8571, 2019; <br>Dual-band Quasi-coherent Radiative Thermal Source, Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer, 216, 99-104, 2018;

Presenters

  • Xueji Wang

    Purdue University

Authors

  • Xueji Wang

    Purdue University

  • Ryan Starko-Bowes

    University of Alberta

  • Zhujing Xu

    Purdue University

  • Sandipan Pramanik

    University of Alberta

  • Na Lu

    Purdue University

  • Tongcang Li

    Purdue University

  • Zubin Jacob

    Purdue University