Many phase transitions in correlated matter exhibit spatial inhomogeneities with expected yet unexplored effects on the associated ultrafast dynamics. Here we demonstrate the combination of ultrafast nondegenerate pump-probe spectroscopy with far from equilibrium excitation, and scattering scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) for ultrafast nanoimaging. In a femtosecond near-field near-IR (NIR) pump and mid-IR (MIR) probe study, we investigate the photoinduced insulator-to-metal (IMT) transition in nominally homogeneous VO2 microcrystals. With pump fluences as high as 5 mJ/cm(2), we can reach three distinct excitation regimes. We observe a spatial heterogeneity on ∼50-100 nm length scales in the fluence-dependent IMT dynamics ranging from <100 fs to ∼1 ps. These results suggest a high sensitivity of the IMT with respect to small local variations in strain, doping, or defects that are difficult to discern microscopically. We provide a perspective with the distinct requirements and considerations of ultrafast spatiotemporal nanoimaging of phase transitions in quantum materials.
Ultrafast infrared nano-imaging has demonstrated access to ultrafast carrier dynamics on the nanoscale in semiconductor, correlated-electron, or polaritonic materials. However, mostly limited to short-lived transient states, the contrast obtained has remained insufficient to probe important long-lived excitations, which arise from many-body interactions induced by strong perturbation among carriers, lattice phonons, or molecular vibrations. Here, we demonstrate ultrafast infrared nano-imaging based on excitation modulation and sideband detection to characterize electron and vibration dynamics with nano- to micro-second lifetimes. As an exemplary application to quantum materials, in phase-resolved ultrafast nano-imaging of the photoinduced insulator-to-metal transition in vanadium dioxide, a distinct transient nano-domain behavior is quantified. In another application to lead halide perovskites, transient vibrational nano-FTIR spatially resolves the excited-state polaron-cation coupling underlying the photovoltaic response. These examples show how heterodyne pump-probe nano-spectroscopy with low-repetition excitation extends ultrafast infrared nano-imaging to probe elementary processes in quantum and molecular materials in space and time.
A hierarchy of intramolecular and
intermolecular interactions controls
the properties of biomedical, photophysical, and novel energy materials.
However, multiscale heterogeneities often obfuscate the relationship
between microscopic structure and emergent function, and they are
generally difficult to access with conventional optical and electron
microscopy techniques. Here, we combine vibrational exciton nanoimaging
in variable-temperature near-field optical microscopy (IR s-SNOM) with four-dimensional scanning transmission electron
microscopy (4D-STEM), and vibrational exciton modeling based on density
functional theory (DFT), to link local microscopic molecular interactions
to macroscopic three-dimensional order. In the application to poly(tetrafluoroethylene)
(PTFE), large spatio-spectral heterogeneities with C–F vibrational
energy shifts ranging from sub-cm–1 to ≳25
cm–1 serve as a molecular ruler of the degree of
local crystallinity and disorder. Spatio-spectral-structural correlations
reveal a previously invisible degree of highly variable local disorder
in molecular coupling as the possible missing link between nanoscale
morphology and associated electronic, photonic, and other functional
properties of molecular materials.
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