Publications by authors named "Yuangang Xie"

The interlayer electronic coupling is responsible for the electronic structure evolution from monolayer graphene to graphite and for the moiré potential in twisted bilayer graphene. Here we demonstrate that the interlayer transfer integral (hopping parameter) increases nearly 40% with a quite moderate pressure of ∼3.5 GPa, manifested by the resonance peak shift in the infrared spectra of all 2-10 L graphene.

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In-plane anisotropic van der Waals materials have emerged as a natural platform for anisotropic polaritons. Extreme anisotropic polaritons with in-situ broadband tunability are of great significance for on-chip photonics, yet their application remains challenging. In this work, we experimentally characterize through Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy measurements a van der Waals plasmonic material, 2M-WS, capable of supporting intrinsic room-temperature in-plane anisotropic plasmons in the far and mid-infrared regimes.

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The evolution of excitons from 2D to 3D is of great importance in photo-physics, yet the layer-dependent exciton polarizability hasn't been investigated in 2D semiconductors. Here, we determine the exciton polarizabilities for 3- to 11-layer black phosphorus-a direct bandgap semiconductor regardless of the thickness-through frequency-resolved photocurrent measurements on dual-gate devices and unveil the carrier screening effect in relatively thicker samples. By taking advantage of the broadband photocurrent spectra, we are also able to reveal the exciton response for higher-index subbands under the gate electrical field.

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Naturally existing in-plane hyperbolic polaritons and the associated optical topological transitions, which avoid the nano-structuring to achieve hyperbolicity, can outperform their counterparts in artificial metasurfaces. Such plasmon polaritons are rare, but experimentally revealed recently in WTe van der Waals thin films. Different from phonon polaritons, hyperbolic plasmon polaritons originate from the interplay of free carrier Drude response and interband transitions, which promise good intrinsic tunability.

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Stacking bilayer structures is an efficient way to tune the topology of polaritons in in-plane anisotropic films, e.g., by leveraging the twist angle (TA).

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Through infrared spectroscopy, we systematically study the pressure effect on electronic structures of few-layer black phosphorus (BP) with layer number ranging from 2 to 13. We reveal that the pressure-induced shift of optical transitions exhibits strong layer dependence. In sharp contrast to the bulk counterpart which undergoes a semiconductor to semimetal transition under ∼1.

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Hyperbolic polaritons exhibit large photonic density of states and can be collimated in certain propagation directions. The majority of hyperbolic polaritons are sustained in man-made metamaterials. However, natural-occurring hyperbolic materials also exist.

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Tunable terahertz plasmons are essential for reconfigurable photonics, which have been demonstrated in graphene through gating, though with relatively weak responses. Here we demonstrate strong terahertz plasmons in graphite thin films via infrared spectroscopy, with dramatic tunability by even a moderate temperature change or an in situ bias voltage. Meanwhile, through magnetoplasmon studies, we reveal that massive electrons and massless Dirac holes make comparable contributions to the plasmon response.

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Plasmons in two-dimensional (2D) materials beyond graphene have recently gained much attention. However, the experimental investigation is limited due to the lack of suitable materials. Here, we experimentally demonstrate localized plasmons in a correlated 2D charge-density-wave (CDW) material: 2H-TaSe.

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The temperature dependence of the band gap is crucial to a semiconductor. Bulk black phosphorus is known to exhibit an anomalous behavior. Through optical spectroscopy, here we show that the temperature effect on black phosphorus band gap gradually evolves with decreasing layer number, eventually turns into a normal one in the monolayer limit, rendering a crossover from the anomalous to the normal.

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A hyperbolic plasmonic surface supports highly directional propagating polaritons with extremely large density of states. Such plasmon polaritons have been realized in artificially structured metasurfaces. However, the upper bound of the achievable plasmon wave vector is limited by the structure size, which calls for a natural hyperbolic surface without any structuring.

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