- Rizzo, Daniel J;
- Zhang, Jin;
- Jessen, Bjarke S;
- Ruta, Francesco L;
- Cothrine, Matthew;
- Yan, Jiaqiang;
- Mandrus, David G;
- Nagler, Stephen E;
- Taniguchi, Takashi;
- Watanabe, Kenji;
- Fogler, Michael M;
- Pasupathy, Abhay N;
- Millis, Andrew J;
- Rubio, Angel;
- Hone, James C;
- Dean, Cory R;
- Basov, DN
The use of work-function-mediated charge transfer has recently emerged as a reliable route toward nanoscale electrostatic control of individual atomic layers. Using α-RuCl3 as a 2D electron acceptor, we are able to induce emergent nano-optical behavior in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) that arises due to interlayer charge polarization. Using scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM), we find that a thin layer of α-RuCl3 adjacent to an hBN slab reduces the propagation length of hBN phonon polaritons (PhPs) in significant excess of what can be attributed to intrinsic optical losses. Concomitant nano-optical spectroscopy experiments reveal a novel resonance that aligns energetically with the region of excess PhP losses. These experimental observations are elucidated by first-principles density-functional theory and near-field model calculations, which show that the formation of a large interfacial dipole suppresses out-of-plane PhP propagation. Our results demonstrate the potential utility of charge-transfer heterostructures for tailoring optoelectronic properties of 2D insulators.