Home
Scholarly Works
Unexpected Near-Infrared to Visible Non-linear...
Preprint

Unexpected Near-Infrared to Visible Non-linear Optical Properties from Two-Dimensional Polar Metals

Abstract

Near-infrared-to-visible second harmonic generation from air-stable two-dimensional polar gallium and indium metals is described. The photonic properties of 2D metals - including the largest second-order susceptibilities reported for metals (approaching 10nm$^2$/V) - are determined by the atomic-level structure and bonding of two-to-three-atom-thick crystalline films. The bond character evolved from covalent to metallic over a few atomic layers, changing the out-of-plane metal-metal bond distances by approximately ten percent (0.2 $\unicode{x212B}$), resulting in symmetry breaking and an axial electrostatic dipole that mediated the large nonlinear response. Two different orientations of the crystalline metal atoms, corresponding to lateral displacements < 2 $\unicode{x212B}$, persisted in separate micron-scale terraces to generate distinct harmonic polarizations. This strong atomic-level structure-property interplay suggests metal photonic properties can be controlled with atomic precision.

Authors

Steves MA; Wang Y; Briggs N; Zhao T; El-Sherif H; Bersch B; Subramanian S; Dong C; Bowen T; Duran ADLF

Publication date

April 3, 2020

DOI

10.48550/arxiv.2004.01809

Preprint server

arXiv
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team