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Anisotropic plasmonic properties at the graphene/CrSBr interface

ORAL

Abstract

CrSBr is a stable 2D magnetic material with strong anisotropy in its electron effective mass in the two in-plane directions. It has been observed to have surface plasmon polariton (SPP) modes with strong anisotropy when a graphene layer is placed on top, as measured by scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM). Using first-principles calculations, we estimated the charge transfer between the graphene and the CrSBr layer which matches well with the measurement. We studied the plasmonic dispersions and lifetimes within the framework of random phase approximation. We explained the observed anisotropic SPP lifetimes and dispersions from our dielectric function calculations based on random phase approximation and plasmonic damping joint density of states analysis. The calculated SPP lifetime in one direction being 10 times larger than the SPP lifetime in the other in-plane direction matches well with the experiments [1]. We show that the charge transfer between the CrSBr layer induces the strong anisotropy in the plasmon propagations which otherwise could not happen in isolated CrSBr. Our result is important for realizing uniaxial plasmon propagation in 2D materials.

Publication: [1] D. J. Rizzo, E. Seewald, F. Zhao, J. Cox, K. Xie, R. A. Vitalone, F. L. Ruta, D. G. Chica, Y. Shao, S. Shabani, E. J. Telford, M. C. Strasbourg, T. P. Darlington, S. Xu, S. Qiu, A. Devarakonda, T. Taniguchi, K. Watanabe, X. Zhu, P. J. Schuck, C. R. Dean, X. Roy, A. J. Millis, T. Cao, A. Rubio, A. N. Pasupathy, and D. N. Basov, "Uniaxial plasmon polaritons via charge transfer at the graphene/CrSBr interface." arXiv:2407.07178, (2024) under review.

Presenters

  • Fangzhou Zhao

    Max Planck Institute for Structure and Dynamics of Matter

Authors

  • Fangzhou Zhao

    Max Planck Institute for Structure and Dynamics of Matter

  • Daniel Joseph Rizzo

    Columbia University

  • Dmitri N Basov

    Columbia University

  • Angel Rubio

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter; Flatiron Institute's Center for Computational Quantum Physics (CCQ) & Initiative for Computational Catalysis (ICC)