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Terahertz-field-induced insulator-to-metal transition in vanadium dioxide metamaterial

  • Mengkun Liu
  • , Harold Y. Hwang
  • , Hu Tao
  • , Andrew C. Strikwerda
  • , Kebin Fan
  • , George R. Keiser
  • , Aaron J. Sternbach
  • , Kevin G. West
  • , Salinporn Kittiwatanakul
  • , Jiwei Lu
  • , Stuart A. Wolf
  • , Fiorenzo G. Omenetto
  • , Xin Zhang
  • , Keith A. Nelson
  • , Richard D. Averitt
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Tufts University
  • Boston University
  • University of Virginia

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1321 Scopus citations

Abstract

Electron-electron interactions can render an otherwise conducting material insulating, with the insulator-metal phase transition in correlated-electron materials being the canonical macroscopic manifestation of the competition between charge-carrier itinerancy and localization. The transition can arise from underlying microscopic interactions among the charge, lattice, orbital and spin degrees of freedom, the complexity of which leads to multiple phase-transition pathways. For example, in many transition metal oxides, the insulator-metal transition has been achieved with external stimuli, including temperature, light, electric field, mechanical strain or magnetic field. Vanadium dioxide is particularly intriguing because both the lattice and on-site Coulomb repulsion contribute to the insulator-to-metal transition at 340K (ref. 8). Thus, although the precise microscopic origin of the phase transition remains elusive, vanadium dioxide serves as a testbed for correlated-electron phase-transition dynamics. Here we report the observation of an insulator-metal transition in vanadium dioxide induced by a terahertz electric field. This is achieved using metamaterial-enhanced picosecond, high-field terahertz pulses to reduce the Coulomb-induced potential barrier for carrier transport. A nonlinear metamaterial response is observed through the phase transition, demonstrating that high-field terahertz pulses provide alternative pathways to induce collective electronic and structural rearrangements. The metamaterial resonators play a dual role, providing sub-wavelength field enhancement that locally drives the nonlinear response, and global sensitivity to the local changes, thereby enabling macroscopic observation of the dynamics. This methodology provides a powerful platform to investigate low-energy dynamics in condensed matter and, further, demonstrates that integration of metamaterials with complex matter is a viable pathway to realize functional nonlinear electromagnetic composites.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)345-348
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume487
Issue number7407
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 19 2012

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