Polar Semiconducting Scandium Nitride as an Infrared Plasmon and Phonon-Polaritonic Material

Nano Lett. 2022 Jul 13;22(13):5182-5190. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c00912. Epub 2022 Jun 17.

Abstract

The interaction of light with collective charge oscillations, called plasmon-polariton, and with polar lattice vibrations, called phonon-polariton, are essential for confining light at deep subwavelength dimensions and achieving strong resonances. Traditionally, doped-semiconductors and conducting metal oxides (CMO) are used to achieve plasmon-polaritons in the near-to-mid infrared (IR), while polar dielectrics are utilized for realizing phonon-polaritons in the long-wavelength IR (LWIR) spectral regions. However, demonstrating low-loss plasmon- and phonon-polaritons in one host material will make it attractive for practical applications. Here, we demonstrate high-quality tunable short-wavelength IR (SWIR) plasmon-polariton and LWIR phonon-polariton in complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor compatible group III-V polar semiconducting scandium nitride (ScN) thin films. We achieve both resonances by utilizing n-type (oxygen) and p-type (magnesium) doping in ScN that allows modulation of carrier concentration from 5 × 1018 to 1.6 × 1021 cm-3. Our work enables infrared nanophotonics with an epitaxial group III semiconducting nitride, opening the possibility for practical applications.

Keywords: Reststrahlen band; alternative plasmonic materials; infrared plasmonics; phonon polariton; plasmon polariton.