The Transmission Line Model for 2D Materials and van der Waals Heterostructures
Tomer Eini, Anabel Atash Kahlon, Matan Meshulam, Thomas Poirier, James H. Edgar, Seth Ariel Tongay, Yarden Mazor, and Itai Epstein

TL;DR
This paper introduces a transmission line model for van der Waals heterostructures of 2D materials, simplifying the analysis of their optical properties by using circuit analogs to better understand and predict their electromagnetic response.
Contribution
The work adapts the transmission line model to 2D material heterostructures, providing a compact, intuitive, and physically meaningful approach to analyze their optical behavior.
Findings
Accurately predicts reflection and transmission coefficients.
Derives polaritonic dispersion relations.
Shows good agreement with experimental data.
Abstract
Van der Waals heterostructures (VdWHs) composed of 2D materials have attracted significant attention in recent years due to their intriguing optical properties, such as strong light-matter interactions and large intrinsic anisotropy. In particular, VdWHs support a variety of polaritons-hybrid quasiparticles arising from the coupling between electromagnetic waves and material excitations-enabling the confinement of electromagnetic radiation to atomic scales. The ability to predict and simulate the optical response of 2D materials heterostructures is thus of high importance, being commonly performed until now via methods such as the TMM, or Fresnel equations. While straight forward, these often yield long and complicated expressions, limiting intuitive and simple access to the underlying physical mechanisms that govern the optical response. In this work, we demonstrate the adaptation of…
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