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Surface phonon polaritons (SPhPs) in polar dielectrics offer new opportunities for infrared nanophotonics due to sub-diffraction confinement with low optical losses. Though the polaritonic field confinement can be significantly improved by modifying the dielectric environment, it is challenging to break the fundamental limits in photon confinement and propagation behavior of SPhP modes. In particular, as SPhPs inherently propagate isotropically in these bulk polar dielectrics, how to collectively realize ultra-large field confinement, in-plane hyperbolicity and unidirectional propagation remains elusive. Here, we report an approach to solve the aforementioned issues of bulk polar dielectrics SPhPs at one go by constructing a heterostructural interface between biaxial van der Waals material (e.g., MoO3) and bulk polar dielectric (e.g., SiC, AlN, and GaN). Due to anisotropy-oriented mode couplings at the interface, the hybridized SPhPs with a large confinement factor (>100) show in-plane hyperbolicity that has been switched to the orthogonal direction as compared to that in natural MoO3. More interestingly, this proof of concept allows steerable, angle-dependent and unidirectional polariton excitation by suspending MoO3 on patterned SiC air cavities. Our finding exemplifies a generalizable framework to manipulate the flow of nano-light and engineer unusual polaritonic responses in many other hybrid systems consisting of van der Waals materials and bulk polar dielectrics.
Highly confined and low-loss hyperbolic phonon polaritons (HPhPs) sustained in van der Waals crystals exhibit outstanding capabilities of concentrating long-wave electromagnetic fields deep to the subwavelength region. Precise tuning on the HPhP prop
Hyperbolic phonon polaritons (HPhPs) sustained in van der Waals (vdW) materials exhibit extraordinary capabilities of confining long-wave electromagnetic fields to the deep subwavelength scale. In stark contrast to the uniaxial vdW hyperbolic materia
The exploitation of phonon-polaritons in nanostructured materials offers a pathway to manipulate infrared (IR) light for nanophotonic applications. Notably, hyperbolic phonons polaritons (HP2) in polar bidimensional crystals have been used to demonst
Hyperbolic phonon polaritons (HPhPs) in orthorhombic-phase molybdenum trioxide ($alpha$-MoO3) show in-plane hyperbolicity, great wavelength compression and ultra-long lifetime, therefore holding great potential in nanophotonic applications. However,
Moire engineering as a configuration method to twist van der Waals materials has delivered a series of advances in electronics, magnetics and optics. Yet these advances stem from peculiar moire superlattices which form at small specific twisting angl