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Fabrication Method Enables Novel Metamaterial Properties

In recent decades, researchers have fabricated metamaterials that interact with light in ways that go beyond the physical limits imposed on naturally occurring materials.

A metamaterial is composed of arrays of “meta-atoms,” which have been fabricated into desirable structures on the scale of about 100 nm. The structure of arrays of meta-atoms facilitates precise light-matter interactions. However, the large size of meta-atoms relative to ordinary atoms, which are smaller than a nanometer, has limited the performance of metamaterials for practical applications.

A research team led by Bo Zhen of the University of Pennsylvania has developed an approach that directly engineers atomic structures of material by stacking the two-dimensional arrays in spiral formations to tap into novel light-matter interaction. This approach enables metamaterials to overcome the current technical limitations and paves the way for next-generation laser, imaging, and quantum technologies.

An artist’s impression of light traveling through twisted tungsten disulfide. It leads to a change in both color and orientation of the light field (helical light field), revealing novel properties not observed in natural tungsten disulfide. Courtesy of Ella Maru/University of Pennsylvania.

“It’s similar to stacking a deck of cards but twisting each card slightly before adding it to the pile,” said Zhen, a senior author of the paper and an assistant professor in the School of Arts and Sciences at Penn. “This twist changes how the entire ‘deck’ responds to light, enabling it to exhibit new properties that individual layers, or traditional stacks, do not possess.”

Bumho Kim, postdoctoral researcher in the Zhen Lab and first author of the paper, explained that by stacking layers of tungsten disulfide (WS2) and twisting them at certain angles, they introduced what’s known as screw symmetries.

“The magic lies in controlling the twist,” Kim said. “When you twist the layers at specific angles, you change the symmetry of the stack. Symmetry, in this context, refers to how certain properties of materials — like how they interact with light — are constrained by their spatial arrangement.”

By tweaking this arrangement at the atomic scale, the researchers bent the rules of what these materials can do, and by controlling the twist across multiple layers of WS2, they created what’s known as 3D nonlinear optical materials.

Kim said that a single layer of WS2 has particular symmetries, which allow certain types of interactions with light, where two photons at a given frequency can interact with the material to produce a new photon at double the frequency, a process known as second-harmonic generation (SHG).

“But when two layers of WS2 are stacked with a twist angle different from the conventional 0° or 180°, all the mirror symmetries that were present in the single layer are broken,” Kim said. “This broken mirror symmetry is crucial because it leads to a chiral response — something entirely new and not seen in the individual layers.”

According to the researchers, the chiral response is significant because it is a cooperative effect resulting from the coupling between the electronic wavefunctions of the two layers, a phenomenon that can arise only in twisted interfaces.

An interesting property, Zhen said, is that the sign of the chiral nonlinear response flips when the twist angle is reversed. This demonstrates direct control over the nonlinear properties by simply changing the twist angle between layers — a level of tunability that could be revolutionary for designing optical materials with custom responses.

Moving from bilayers to trilayers and beyond, the researchers observed how the interfacial SHG responses can constructively or destructively interfere depending on the twist angles between the layers.

In a stack with layers in multiples of four, “the chiral responses from all interfaces add up, while the in-plane responses cancel out,” Kim said. “This leads to a new material that exhibits only chiral nonlinear susceptibilities. This result could not be achieved without the precise stacking and twisting of the layers.”

The researchers found that screw symmetry enables new selectivity for the light’s electric field in the material, a part of light that determines its direction and intensity. Kim noted how they found that screw symmetry enables a new kind of light generation in twisted four- and eight-layer stacks, counter-circularly polarized third-harmonic generation, wherein light travels in the opposite spiral direction — a quality not seen in constituent WS2 monolayers.

“Adding an artificial screw symmetry allows us to control nonlinear optical circular selectivity at the nanoscale,” Kim said.

In testing this technique experimentally, the researchers verified the predicted nonlinearities inherent in various configurations of twisted WS2 stacks. The team observed new nonlinear responses and circular selectivity in twisted WS2 stacks that cannot be found in naturally occurring WS2, a revelation that could have profound implications in the field of nonlinear optics.

The research was published in Nature Photonics (www.doi.org/10.1038/s41566-023-01318-6).

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