Paper 13111-4
Emerging materials for photonics: MXenes and Weyl semimetals (Keynote Presentation)
18 August 2024 • 10:35 AM - 11:15 AM PDT | Conv. Ctr. Room 4
Abstract
Two emerging material classes, namely, two-dimensional transition-metal carbides and nitrides (MXenes) and Weyl Semimetals (WSMs) offer exciting opportunities for tailorable photonic devices. The designer-like characteristics of MXenes, achievable with the choice of composition, stoichiometry and surface termination, and tunable properties of single crystalline WSMs, realized through the manipulation of surface conditions, lead to impressive tunability of optical properties in both systems. MXenes exhibit diverse optical properties ranging from plasmonic behavior to dielectric-to-metallic transition as well as strong nonlinear response useful for ultrafast applications. In turn, WSMs such as TaAs show high photocurrent generation and strong second-harmonic generation while WTe2 holds a promise for chiral anomaly applications. The manipulation of linear and nonlinear optical response including the epsilon near zero (ENZ) behavior as well as investigation of hybrid plasmonic-MXene and plasmonic-WSM structures open a broad range of applications for these materials in emerging photonics.
Presenter
Purdue Univ. (United States)
Alexandra Boltasseva is a Professor of ECE at Purdue University. She received her PhD in electrical engineering at Technical University of Denmark, DTU in 2004. Boltasseva specializes in nanophotonics, quantum photonics, and optical materials. She is the 2023 recipient of the R.W. Wood Prize (Optica, formerly Optical Society of America), 2022 Guggenheim Fellow, 2018 Blavatnik National Award for Young Scientists Finalist and received the 2013 Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Photonics Society Young Investigator Award, 2013 Materials Research Society (MRS) Outstanding Young Investigator Award, the 2011 MIT Technology Review Top Young Innovator (TR35), and the Young Elite-Researcher Award from the Danish Council for Independent Research (2008). She is a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI) (2020), MRS (2021), IEEE (2020), Optica (2017), and International Society for Optical Engineers (SPIE) (2015).