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  4. Nanophotonics with multilayer van der Waals materials
 
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Nanophotonics with multilayer van der Waals materials

Publikationstyp
Review Article
Date Issued
2025-08-13
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Zotev, Panaiot G.
Bouteyre, Paul
Wang, Yadong
Randerson, Sam A.
Hu, Xuerong
Sortino, Luca  
Wang, Yue  
Shegai, Timur
Gong, Su-Hyun  
Tittl, Andreas  
Aharonovich, Igor  
Tartakovskii, Alexander I.  
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/62041
Journal
Nature photonics  
Volume
19
Issue
8
Start Page
788
End Page
802
Citation
Nature Photonics 19 (8): 788-802 (2025)
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41566-025-01717-x
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-105013350422
Publisher
Nature Publ. Group
The field of nanophotonics requires high-quality materials for the fabrication of resonant structures that can confine light down to the nanoscale. Metallic nanostructures often used for this purpose exhibit high optical losses, so high-refractive-index dielectrics such as silicon (Si) and III–V semiconductors are widely used instead. Recently, layered materials, often referred to as ‘van der Waals materials’ for the forces holding atomic planes together in bulk crystals, have been introduced as alternative dielectric building blocks for nanophotonics. Compared to traditional semiconductors, these materials exhibit higher refractive indices and transparency in the visible and near-infrared favourable for compact waveguides; strong birefringence and large nonlinear optical coefficients attractive for nonlinear optics; and out-of-plane van der Waals adhesive forces enabling novel tuning techniques and heterointegration approaches for the realization of previously inaccessible photonic structures. Recently, these properties of quasi-bulk van der Waals materials (as opposed to their widely studied monolayers) have been applied in a variety of photonic structures and devices, which will be discussed here. We report on recent progress in utilizing layered materials in waveguiding, wavefront shaping, Purcell enhancement, quantum nanophotonics, lasing, nonlinear optics, and strong light–matter coupling, as well as offer a snapshot of future developments in hybrid and tunable nanophotonics, three-dimensional photonic structures, optical trapping, polariton devices and van der Waals integrated nanophotonic circuits.
DDC Class
600: Technology
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