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Analyzing Buried Defects in Vanadium Oxide with Bragg Coherent Diffractive Imaging

ORAL

Abstract

Metal-insulator transitions accompanied by structural phase transitions in vanadium oxides have attracted considerable scientific interest for applications in photonics, sensing, and IR light modulation. Many stoichiometries have been explored, including V2O3, VO2, V2O5, and V3O51. While the precise mechanism of the transition is controversial, it is influenced by a number of properties like crystal strain, morphology, and electron correlations2. Therefore, further study of nanoscale strain and crystal defects in these crystals is pivotal to advance understanding of these transitions.

Past studies of defects in vanadium oxides have been limited to surface techniques or destructive characterization. These fail to give volumetric information, masking the presence of buried defects in as-grown crystals. In this work we use Bragg Coherent Diffractive Imaging (BCDI) to analyze in 3 dimensions a V2O3 particle with nanoscale resolution and picometer strain sensitivity. We identify buried defects in the crystal and analyze the role these defects play in particle morphology. Our results emphasize the role defects play in the growth of 2D flake-like V2O3 particles.

1 C. Piccirillo et al, Chemical Vapor Deposition 13, 145 (2007)

2 A. D’Elia et al, Applied Surface Science 540, 148341 (2021)

Publication: Imaging defects in vanadium(III) oxide nanocrystals using Bragg coherent diffractive imaging in CrystEngComm, 2021, 23, 6239-6244 https://doi.org/10.1039/D1CE00736J

Presenters

  • Zachary J Barringer

    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Authors

  • Zachary J Barringer

    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

  • Jie Jiang

    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

  • Xiaowen Shi

    New Mexico State University, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Silvia Cipiccia

    Diamond Light Source

  • Jian Shi

    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

  • Edwin Fohtung

    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute