Femtosecond Time-Resolved Nano-Imaging of the Insulator-to-Metal Transition in Vanadium Dioxide

ORAL

Abstract

We have preformed femtosecond time-resolved and nanometer spatially resolved measurements of the insulator-to-metal transition in Vanadium Dioxide (VO$_{\mathrm{2}})$. In order to make this work possible, we have devised and implemented a method for artifact-free nano-imaging with pulsed laser sources. We observe that the transient metallic state is highly inhomogeneous. Following an ultrafast pumping event, a homogeneous increase in near-field signal occurs, which signifies that the initial injection of conduction electrons is homogeneous. This is followed by the inhomogeneous insulator-to-metal transition, which evolves over two distinct timescales from tens to hundreds of picoseconds. Our advances pave a pathway to study a wide range of systems with inhomogeneities properties on the nanoscale with nanoscopic spatial, and ultrafast temporal resolution.

Authors

  • Aaron Sternbach

    • Columbia University Physics Department
  • Kyle Lewis

    • University of California, San Diego Physics Department
  • Peter Kissin

    • University of California, San Diego Physics Department
  • Tetiana Slusar

    • University of Science and Technology School of Advanced Device Technology, Metal-Insulator Transition Creative Research Center ETRI
  • Hyun-Tak Kim

    • ETRI in Korea
    • University of Science and Technology School of Advanced Device Technology, Metal-Insulator Transition Creative Research Center ETRI
  • Richard Averitt

    • University of California, San Diego Physics Department
    • Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego
    • University of California San Diego
  • Dmitri Basov

    • Columbia University Physics Department
    • Columbia University
    • Columbia Univ, UC San Diego