Tuning polariton hybridization in hyperbolic hetero-bicrystals by twist angle engineering
Abstract
Phonon polaritons are hybrid light–matter quasiparticles that enable confinement and control of electromagnetic modes at the nanoscale. Particular interest has been paid to hetero-bicrystals composed of molybdenum oxide (α-MoO3) and isotopically pure hexagonal boron nitride (h11BN), which feature polariton dispersion tailorable via the spectral gap originating from polariton hybridization. In this work, we propose unexplored hetero-crystals assembled from Ca-intercalated metal oxide α′-(Ca)V2O5 and α-MoO3, allowing the polaritons to travel along closed trajectories inside the bicrystal within the spectral gap. We systematically study the dependence of the spectral gap on the twist angle and thickness ratio of constituting layers in α′-(Ca)V2O5/α-MoO3 and the initial h11BN/α-MoO3. We show that on–off switching and strong tuning of the spectral gap in polariton dispersion can be realized by varying the twist angle in both structures. In particular, the spectral gap in α′-(Ca)V2O5/α-MoO3 can exist over a wide range of twist angles, three times as broad as that in h11BN/α-MoO3. Moreover, the spectral gap can also be significantly tuned by altering the thickness ratio. The spectral gap in α′-(Ca)V2O5/α-MoO3 emerges in a higher frequency range that is not achievable in h11BN/α-MoO3. Our results demonstrate that α′-(Ca)V2O5/α-MoO3 and h11BN/α-MoO3 provide two powerful bicrystal systems for polariton engineering via tuning the twist angle and thickness ratio.