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Ultrafast X-ray imaging of the light-induced phase transition in VO2

Authors :
Johnson, Allan S.
Perez-Salinas, Daniel
Siddiqui, Khalid M.
Kim, Sungwon
Choi, Sungwook
Volckaert, Klara
Majchrzak, Paulina E.
Ulstrup, Søren
Agarwal, Naman
Hallman, Kent
Haglund, Richard F.
Günther, Christian M.
Pfau, Bastian
Eisebitt, Stefan
Backes, Dirk
Maccherozzi, Francesco
Fitzpatrick, Ann
Dhesi, Sarnjeet S.
Gargiani, Pierluigi
Valvidares, Manuel
Artrith, Nongnuch
de Groot, Frank
Choi, Hyeongi
Jang, Dogeun
Katoch, Abhishek
Kwon, Soonnam
Park, Sang Han
Kim, Hyunjung
Wall, Simon E.
Johnson, Allan S.
Perez-Salinas, Daniel
Siddiqui, Khalid M.
Kim, Sungwon
Choi, Sungwook
Volckaert, Klara
Majchrzak, Paulina E.
Ulstrup, Søren
Agarwal, Naman
Hallman, Kent
Haglund, Richard F.
Günther, Christian M.
Pfau, Bastian
Eisebitt, Stefan
Backes, Dirk
Maccherozzi, Francesco
Fitzpatrick, Ann
Dhesi, Sarnjeet S.
Gargiani, Pierluigi
Valvidares, Manuel
Artrith, Nongnuch
de Groot, Frank
Choi, Hyeongi
Jang, Dogeun
Katoch, Abhishek
Kwon, Soonnam
Park, Sang Han
Kim, Hyunjung
Wall, Simon E.
Source :
Nature Physics vol.19 (2023) nr.2 p.215-220 [ISSN 1745-2473]
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Using light to control transient phases in quantum materials is an emerging route to engineer new properties and functionality, with both thermal and non-thermal phases observed out of equilibrium. Transient phases are expected to be heterogeneous, either through photo-generated domain growth or by generating topological defects, and this impacts the dynamics of the system. However, this nanoscale heterogeneity has not been directly observed. Here we use time- and spectrally resolved coherent X-ray imaging to track the prototypical light-induced insulator-to-metal phase transition in vanadium dioxide on the nanoscale with femtosecond time resolution. We show that the early-time dynamics are independent of the initial spatial heterogeneity and observe a 200 fs switch to the metallic phase. A heterogeneous response emerges only after hundreds of picoseconds. Through spectroscopic imaging, we reveal that the transient metallic phase is a highly orthorhombically strained rutile metallic phase, an interpretation that is in contrast to those based on spatially averaged probes. Our results demonstrate the critical importance of spatially and spectrally resolved measurements for understanding and interpreting the transient phases of quantum materials.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature Physics vol.19 (2023) nr.2 p.215-220 [ISSN 1745-2473]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1038/s41567-022-01848-w, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1445832315
Document Type :
Electronic Resource