Tunable hyperbolic Landau-level polaritons in charge-neutral graphene nanoribbon metasurfaces

Magnetized charge-neutral graphene supports collective hybrid electronic excitations─polaritons─which have a quantum origin. In contrast to polaritons in doped graphene, which arise from intraband electronic transitions, those in charge-neutral graphene originate from interband transitions between L...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Domina, Kateryna, Slipchenko, Tetiana, Nguyen, D.-H.-Minh, Kuzmenko, Alexey B., Martín-Moreno, Luis, Bercioux, Dario, Nikitin, Alexey Y.
Format: article
Publication Date:2025
Country:España
Institution:Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)
Repository:DIGITAL.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC
OAI Identifier:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/403719
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/403719
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Quantum hyperbolic polaritons
Hyperbolic Landau-level polaritons
Magnetic excitons
Magnetized charge-neutral graphene
Graphene nanoribbon
Graphene metasurface
Description
Summary:Magnetized charge-neutral graphene supports collective hybrid electronic excitations─polaritons─which have a quantum origin. In contrast to polaritons in doped graphene, which arise from intraband electronic transitions, those in charge-neutral graphene originate from interband transitions between Landau levels, enabled by the applied magnetic field. Control of such quantum polaritons and shaping their wavefronts remains totally unexplored. Here, we design an artificial two-dimensional quantum material formed by charge-neutral graphene nanoribbons exposed to an external magnetic field. In such a metasurface, quantum polaritons acquire a hyperbolic dispersion. We find that the topology of the isofrequency curves of quantum hyperbolic magnetoexciton polaritons excited in this quantum material can change, so that the shape of the isofrequency curves transforms from a closed to an open one by tuning the external magnetic field strength. At the topological transition, we observe canalization phenomena, consisting of the propagation of all of the polaritonic plane waves in the continuum along the same direction when excited by a point source. From a general perspective, our fundamental findings introduce a novel type of actively tunable quantum polaritons with hyperbolic dispersion and can be further generalized to other types of quantum materials and polaritons in them. In practice, quantum hyperbolic polaritons can be used for applications related to quantum sensing and computing.