In the rapidly evolving landscape of two-dimensional (2D) materials and their van der Waals heterostructures, researchers continuously grapple with the challenge of characterizing interlayer interactions at the atomic scale. These materials, comprising atomically thin stacked layers, hold immense promise for revolutionizing quantum electronics and optoelectronic devices. However, a longstanding technical barrier has impeded progress: the elusive detection of interlayer layer-breathing vibrations, essential phonon modes that reveal the coupling dynamics between layers.
Layer-breathing (LB) modes are fundamentally critical to understanding how 2D stacks interact, influencing properties like electronic band structure, charge transfer, and excitonic behavior. However, due to strict symmetry constraints and the intrinsically faint Raman scattering signals they produce, conventional spectroscopic techniques have been largely ineffective in capturing these vibrations. This invisibility cloaks crucial interfacial phenomena within layered materials, making it nearly impossible for scientists to fully decipher their complex stacking configurations and coupling mechanisms.
A recent breakthrough led by Professor Ping-Heng Tan and colleagues from the State Key Laboratory of Semiconductor Physics and Chip Technologies at the Chinese Academy of Sciences shines a new light on this problem. Their innovative strategy leverages plasmonic nanocavities—specifically gold and silver nanocavities (AuNCs and AgNCs)—to amplify and unveil the once-hidden layer-breathing modes in multilayer graphene (NLG), hexagonal boron nitride (hBN), and their heterostructures. This universal nano-amplifier approach heralds a new era of atomic-scale probing, providing unprecedented insights into interlayer phonons.
At the heart of their discovery is the utilization of highly confined electromagnetic fields produced by plasmonic nanocavities. These nanocavities can localize light into volumes much smaller than the wavelength itself, generating localized surface plasmon resonances that dramatically increase the electromagnetic field intensity at the nanoscale. This extreme light confinement not only boosts the weak Raman signals from LB modes by several orders of magnitude but also fundamentally alters the selection rules that previously rendered these modes “silent” in standard Raman spectroscopy.
More than simple signal enhancement, the interaction between the localized plasmonic field and 2D materials reconfigures the optical environment at the interface, effectively modulating interlayer polarization. This modulation activates layer-breathing vibrations forbidden under usual symmetry conditions and enhances the Raman dipole moment associated with these modes. Such a dual effect transforms the detection paradigm, making it possible to directly observe and characterize the subtle vibrational dynamics that govern interlayer coupling.
To rigorously explain these phenomena, the research team developed a comprehensive theoretical framework called the Electric-field-modulated Interlayer Bond Polarizability Model (E-IBPM). This model bridges the microscopic interaction between plasmonic electromagnetic enhancement and the internal bond polarizability at the interfaces of layered materials. Serving as a powerful tool, E-IBPM accurately predicts how the relative Raman intensities evolve under plasmonic influence across different 2D systems. This theoretical advance demystifies the physical mechanisms responsible for turning weak or forbidden LB modes into strong, detectable signals.
High-resolution electron microscopy images confirm the precise assembly of multilayer graphene embedded within plasmonic nanocavities, illustrating the hybrid architecture essential for achieving this dramatic spectroscopic enhancement. Corresponding dark-field scattering spectra reveal resonance peaks indicative of efficient localized plasmon excitation at the interfaces. These observations provide direct experimental validation of the plasmon-enhanced vibrational responses seen in low-frequency Raman spectra.
The implications of this technology extend far beyond graphene or any individual material. It constitutes a versatile, non-destructive spectroscopic tool to investigate a broad class of layered van der Waals structures, unmasking interfacial phonons that have traditionally evaded detection. This capability is vital for advancing the field of layered quantum materials, enabling researchers to study stacking order, interlayer strain, and electronic coupling with unparalleled detail.
Moreover, the approach is anticipated to open new frontiers in detecting previously inaccessible quasiparticles, including interlayer excitons whose properties are deeply linked with the vibrational landscape of the material. Such advancements could catalyze the development of next-generation quantum devices that exploit subtle interlayer phenomena, fostering innovations in quantum information processing, photodetection, and nanoelectronics.
This work also underscores the transformative power of integrating plasmonics with low-dimensional materials science. By harnessing the interplay between light and matter at the nanoscale, the researchers have crafted a universally applicable platform that transcends the limitations of conventional spectroscopies. Their findings illustrate how engineering beyond the classical boundaries of optics can fundamentally shift the capabilities for investigating complex condensed matter systems.
The presented research represents a significant milestone in the exploration of 2D material interfaces, where traditional optical methods fail to yield adequate information. As device architectures grow increasingly intricate, the need for reliable, sensitive characterization tools only intensifies. This plasmonic nanocavity-enabled methodology is poised to become an indispensable asset in the materials scientist’s toolkit.
Looking forward, the research team envisions that the principles established in their work—merging plasmonic enhancement with tailored optical-field modulation—will inspire future studies aimed at manipulating and probing a wide range of hidden phonon modes and subtle interlayer phenomena. This trajectory promises rich discoveries and more refined control over layered system properties crucial for emerging quantum technologies.
In summary, the landmark study by Ping-Heng Tan’s group demonstrates that the convergence of plasmonics and 2D materials physics can pierce through longstanding barriers, converting faint whispers of atomic vibrations into loud, measurable signals. This paradigm shift not only unlocks a deeper understanding of layered materials but also charts a course toward enhanced design and engineering of quantum electronic and photonic devices informed by their interlayer vibrational fingerprints.
Subject of Research: Two-dimensional materials, interlayer layer-breathing vibrations, plasmonic nanocavities, Raman spectroscopy
Article Title: Plasmonic nanocavity-enabled universal detection of layer-breathing vibrations in two-dimensional materials
Web References:
DOI: 10.1038/s41377-026-02203-x
Image Credits: Ping-Heng Tan et al.
Tags: atomic-scale vibrational modes in graphene layersdetection of layer-breathing vibrations in heterostructuresinterlayer coupling in van der Waals heterostructuresoptoelectronic applications of 2D material vibrationsphonon dynamics in two-dimensional materialsplasmonic nanocavities for 2D materials characterizationquantum electronics and layer-breathing phononsRaman spectroscopy enhancement with gold nanocavitiessilver nanocavities in phonon mode detection



