On-chip multi-degree-of-freedom control of two-dimensional quantum and nonlinear materials
Haoning Tang, Yiting Wang, Xueqi Ni, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi, Taniguchi, Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, Shanhui Fan, Eric Mazur, Amir Yacoby, and, Yuan Cao

TL;DR
This paper introduces an on-chip MEMS platform enabling real-time, precise control of interfacial properties in 2D materials, allowing for novel tunable quantum and nonlinear optical device functionalities.
Contribution
It presents the first scalable, integrated MEMS device for in situ tuning of 2D material interfaces, surpassing external machinery limitations and enabling advanced device engineering.
Findings
Engineered topological singularities in h-BN using the platform
Achieved control over twist angle and interlayer separation
Induced strong circular dichroism in second-harmonic generation
Abstract
Two-dimensional materials (2DM) and their derived heterostructures have electrical and optical properties that are widely tunable via several approaches, most notably electrostatic gating and interfacial engineering such as twisting. While electrostatic gating is simple and has been ubiquitously employed on 2DM, being able to tailor the interfacial properties in a similar real-time manner represents the next leap in our ability to modulate the underlying physics and build exotic devices with 2DM. However, all existing approaches rely on external machinery such as scanning microscopes, which often limit their scope of applications, and there is currently no means of tuning a 2D interface that has the same accessibility and scalability as electrostatic gating. Here, we demonstrate the first on-chip platform designed for 2D materials with in situ tunable interfacial properties, utilizing a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Topological Materials and Phenomena · Graphene research and applications
