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Giant Optical Anisotropy in 2D Metal-Organic Chalcogenates

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arxiv 2401.00590 v2 pith:WENH5MHH submitted 2023-12-31 physics.optics

Giant Optical Anisotropy in 2D Metal-Organic Chalcogenates

classification physics.optics
keywords mithreneanisotropicanisotropygiantin-planestructurebirefringencebirefringent
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Optical anisotropy is a fundamental attribute of some crystalline materials and is quantified via birefringence. A birefringent crystal not only gives rise to asymmetrical light propagation but also attenuation along two distinct polarizations, a phenomenon called linear dichroism (LD). Two-dimensional (2D) layered materials with high in- and out-of-plane anisotropy have garnered interest in this regard. Mithrene, a 2D metal-organic chalcogenate (MOCHA) compound, exhibits strong excitonic resonances due to its naturally occurring multi-quantum well (MQW) structure and in-plane anisotropic response in the blue wavelength (~400-500 nm) regime. The MQW structure and the large refractive indices of mithrene allow the hybridization of the excitons with photons to form self-hybridized exciton-polaritons in mithrene crystals with appropriate thicknesses. Here, we report the giant birefringence (~1.01) and tunable in-plane anisotropic response of mithrene, which stem from its low symmetry crystal structure and unique excitonic properties. We show that the LD in mithrene can be tuned by leveraging the anisotropic exciton-polariton formation via the cavity coupling effect exhibiting giant in-plane LD (~77.1%) at room temperature. Our results indicate that mithrene is an ideal polaritonic birefringent material for polarization-sensitive nanophotonic applications in the short wavelength regime.

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