Imaging the nanoscale phase separation in vanadium dioxide thin films at terahertz frequencies

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Abstract

Vanadium dioxide (VO2) is a material that undergoes an insulator–metal transition upon heating above 340 K. It remains debated as to whether this electronic transition is driven by a corresponding structural transition or by strong electron–electron correlations. Here, we use apertureless scattering near-field optical microscopy to compare nanoscale images of the transition in VO2 thin films acquired at both mid-infrared and terahertz frequencies, using a home-built terahertz near-field microscope. We observe a much more gradual transition when THz frequencies are utilized as a probe, in contrast to the assumptions of a classical first-order phase transition. We discuss these results in light of dynamical mean-field theory calculations of the dimer Hubbard model recently applied to VO2, which account for a continuous temperature dependence of the optical response of the VO2 in the insulating state.

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Stinson, H. T., Sternbach, A., Najera, O., Jing, R., Mcleod, A. S., Slusar, T. V., … Basov, D. N. (2018). Imaging the nanoscale phase separation in vanadium dioxide thin films at terahertz frequencies. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05998-5

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