Introduction

Realizing the potential of nanophotonics for signal and information processing requires control and manipulation of light at subwavelength scales. Optical energy concentration on the nanoscale is achieved on metal nanostructures due to polar electronic modes called surface plasmons (SPs)1,2,3. Photonic crystals are used for complete reflection, guiding and confinement of light4, while metamaterials are used to transform light in unconventional ways, making possible such novel devices as perfect absorbers5 , circular polarizers6 and selectively reflecting surfaces7. While novel devices that control the propagation of light on the nanoscale have been demonstrated1,8,9,10, active nanoscale control of optical physics in nanostructures is still a major challenge in11,12,13 and a bottleneck for, related technologies. Nanoscopic control of the insulator and metallic phases of vanadium dioxide (VO2) would open up a universe of applications in nanophotonics via modulation of the local dielectric environment of nanophotonic structures, allowing them to function as active devices.

In this Article, we demonstrate unprecedented active nanoscale control of concentration of light by single plasmonic infrared antennas in the near-field. The active control of the dielectric environment by the insulator-to-metal transition (IMT) in vanadium oxide (VO2), dynamically the transforms nanoantennas from dipole to monopole and back. We utilize the local, reversible change of refractive index of VO2 that undergoes a first-order phase transition from an insulating monoclinic phase to a metallic rutile phase near 70 °C in bulk single crystals14, the transition can also be induced by strain15,16 and ultrafast light pulses17,18. In polycrystalline VO2 thin films, the IMT begins as conductive nanodomains nucleate and with increasing temperature evolve to interconnect in a percolative fashion throughout the film19. At intermediate stages of the IMT, insulating and metallic phases coexist, forming a network of high- and low-conductivity nanodomains throughout the film. Since the metallic and insulating nanodomains have substantially different refractive indices, VO2 films provide for direct local control of the dielectric environment at nanometer spatial dimensions, which, in turn, can directly modulate optical responses of nanophotonic structures.

So far, the effects of the VO2 IMT on plasmonic nanostructures have been studied only in the far-field20, so that understanding and active control of the near-field interaction by the VO2 domains has been elusive. Here, we present an experimental study of nanoscale interactions of plasmonic structures with VO2 undergoing the IMT using scattering-scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM)21, which images local vector near-fields with minimal perturbation, indispensable for the study of nanoplasmonic phenomena22,23,24,25. Image formation in s-SNOM relies on the effective polarizability of tip-sample complex, allowing image contrast that is based on local dielectric environment, which is ideal for nanoscale imaging of IMT.

Results

The model system comprised an array of identical infrared plasmonic nanoantennas: gold nanorods fabricated by e-beam lithography on a 100 nm VO2 film grown on a [100]R Si substrate (Fig. 1a). The dimensions of the rods (~2510 nm × 232 nm × 30 nm) were selected to be near-field resonant at mid-infrared frequencies (10.7 μm vacuum wavelength). Near-field optical images were acquired using a commercial s-SNOM system (neaspec.com). A linearly polarized CO2 laser is focused on the tip–sample interface at an angle of 45° to the sample surface (Fig. 1b). The scattered field is detected by phase-modulation (pseudo-heterodyne) interferometry, yielding topography, amplitude and phase images23,24,25,26.

Figure 1
figure 1

Temperature dependent nanoscale near-field amplitude images of IMT emergence and progress around the infrared antennas.

(a) Topography of the four antennas on VO2 film. The scale bar indicates 1 μm. (b) Schematic of the s-SNOM experimental setup, which allows polarization-controlled simultaneous imaging of IR plasmonic antenna modes together with the phase spatial evolution of VO2 phase transition in amplitude and phase. The coordinate system is positioned so that the y axis is directed along nanorods and the z-axis is normal to the plane of the nanostructure. (c) Temperature-dependent near-field amplitude images reveal IMT via forming initial metallic nanodomains, which grow and connect to stripes and quasi-uniform metallic phase.

First, we investigate the temperature-dependent emergence of metallic nanodomains during the IMT. The temperature was controlled by a heater and a p-polarized (in the yz plane)) excitation laser was tuned to 10.7 μm, with the p-polarized detection (Fig. 1 and Methods). Figure 1 shows the third harmonic (of the tip oscillation frequency) amplitude (A3) images of VO2 and the Au nanorod array as a function of temperature. These images reveal the emergence of an anisotropic network of bright domains as the IMT progresses with increasing temperature. While the onset of these local metallic domains appears random, the stripes in fact evolve by connecting to the existing domains in crystallographically preferred directions until a quasi-uniform rutile phase emerges at high temperatures. In the s-SNOM, higher local polarizability in the sample results in stronger near-field optical contrast; hence these near-field images faithfully represent temperature-driven formation of metallic domains in the VO2 film19.

The formation of stripe phases was noted soon after the discovery of VO2. Subsequently, a link was inferred between the stripe phase and substrate strain in high-quality single crystals and thick (250 nm) epitaxial grown by ion-beam assisted sputtering on TiO2 [100]R surfaces27,28. Stripe formation is also correlated with the power of a near-IR pump laser (1.56 μm), close to the surface-plasmon resonance of the VO2.

Here, the VO2 films are thinner (100 nm), polycrystalline and have no epitaxial relationship to the Si substrate. Nevertheless, the stripe phase appears during the transition from monoclinic to rutile, suggesting that it may occur simply because of localized, in-plane (xy) strains that develop at the film surface as individual grains of VO2 begin to change phase, without any reference to the substrate. This possibility is further supported by the very small height of the stripes seen in the present experiment (Fig. 2).

Figure 2
figure 2

Topography correlation with near-field signal.

(a) Topography and (b) third harmonic near-field amplitude image showing four Au infrared antennas on VO2 film. (c) topography line profile superimposed on amplitude line profile at the marked positions shown by the lines shown in (a,b).

The IMT metallic stripes appear with localized near-uniform spacing in the near-field amplitude image at an intermediate phase coexistence temperature. These are accompanied by correlated topographic modulation as clearly shown in Fig. 2. Topography (Fig. 2a) and near-field amplitude (Fig. 2b) images are taken at excitation laser wavelength, λ = 10.7 μm and temperature, T = 344 K, along with the line profile sketches (Fig. 2c). The topographic variation in our case is smaller (0–3 nm) and the correlation weaker compared to what was observed on a TiO2 substrate (0–5 nm)27. The correlation of the topographic line profile with the periodic stripes is due to a structural change in VO2 during MIT, which results from the modulation of the rutile and the monoclinic axes.

To directly visualize plasmonic modes of the antennas and their interaction with the IMT of the VO2 film, we implement in-plane polarization-selective excitation (s-excitation, i.e. polarized along the y direction) and in-plane detection (s-detection), which is referred to s/s imaging. Figure 3 shows topography, third-harmonic s/s near-field amplitudes and phase images of the antennas on the VO2 film for different temperatures. The four IR antennas are nominally identical (Fig. 3a), making it possible to compare the effects of VO2 IMT on them. The amplitude images (Fig. 3b–d) show bright and dark optical contrast due to the coexisting insulating (dark) and metallic (bright) phases affecting the nanoscale dielectric environment of the antennas. The metallic phase begins to form randomly with increasing temperature. As a result, portions of the antennas are located partly on the metallic and partly on the insulating phases of VO2 as observed in the amplitude images (Fig. 3b–d). The amplitude images allow one to see the change of nanoscale field magnitudes and the metallic phase formation. At the same time, the near-field phase images Fig. 3e–h) are less sensitive to material contrast but allow one to follow the dipolar mode modification on each of the four antennas due to IMT. They display strong phase contrast at the rod ends. The VO2 regions exhibit very weak phase contrast as shown in Fig. 3e–h, which is independent of excitation or detection polarizations.

Figure 3
figure 3

Temperature-controlled IMT and antenna near-field images.

Near-field 3rd harmonic amplitude (b–d) and phase (e–h) images. Schematics (i–l) describing experimental results of IR plasmonic antenna modes simultaneously with VO2 thin film IMT domain formation and propagation.

At room temperature, all antennas display identically the expected pronounced dipolar phase contrast at their ends, as shown in Fig. 3e. At higher temperatures, all antennas whose one end is situated on the metallic phase turn from dipole to monopole as evident for Rod 1 (Fig. 3f–h), Rod 3 (Fig. 3f) and Rod 4 (Fig. 3f–g). At even higher temperature, when the amplitude image shows that most of the film is in metallic phase (Fig. 3d), both dipole and monopole antenna modes of Rods 2, 3 and 4 turn off (Fig. 3h) completely. An interesting case is Rod 2: despite the middle part of the rod sitting on the metallic phase (Fig. 3c), it still retains its dipole characteristics (Fig. 3g) since both ends are on the insulating grains. It only turns off at higher temperature when the entire antenna is situated on metal (Fig. 3h). These results are interpreted in schematics shown in Fig. 3i–l. This interpretation is supported by numerical calculations performed using the finite difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations (Lumerical Inc.,) shown in Fig. 4, which are in excellent qualitative agreement with experiment.

Figure 4
figure 4

Finite difference time-domain simulations.

Single antenna field intensity, phase and surface charge images of FDTD simulations. On schematic of the upper panel, I and M denote insulator and metal phases, respectively.

Further tracking of active dipole-to-monopole transformation of plasmonic antennas can be performed using s-excitation and p-detection (s/p) cross-polarization selective imaging see Fig. 5. Panel a displays topography, third harmonic optical near-field amplitude and phase images of an Au antenna on the VO2 substrate at room temperature. The amplitude image displays a stronger optical contrast at rod ends and the phase image shows π phase difference between the rod ends. The amplitude and phase images both exhibit the signature of a dipolar mode of a plasmonic rod expected from S/P cross-polarized excitation/detection experimental method.

Figure 5
figure 5

Cross-polarized s/p excitation-detection imaging of plasmons and IMT of VO2.

(a) Topography, near-field amplitude and phase images of IR antenna at room temperature. (b) near-field amplitude and (c) near-field phase images of antenna on VO2 film at three different temperatures.

Figure 5b shows amplitude contrast of the Au dipolar mode simultaneously with the metallic domain at the onset of phase transition at T = 341 K. Here, the amplitude optical contrast at rod ends is masked by the bright metallic domain contrast of the VO2 film and is not clearly distinguishable in the amplitude image. In contrast, the phase image (Fig. 5c) distinctly discriminates the Au plasmonic rod from the metallic background of VO2 film. As temperature increases (T = 344 K), the metallic phase grows and a portion of one side of the rod sits on the metal and the other side sits on the insulator. The phase image between the rod ends indicates dipole (at T = 296 K and 341 K) to monopole (at T = 344 K) to off (at T = 348 K) transformation of the nanoantenna.

In summary, we have shown the first experimental evidence that near-field local optical processes in plasmonic nanostructures can be directly and actively controlled by nanodomains in VO2 film as it undergoes the IMT. Depending on the precise location of the nanoantennas with respect to metallic and insulating domains in the VO2 film on the scale of 15 nm or less, the IMT reversibly transforms infrared plasmonic dipole antennas to monopole antennas or switches them off. We envision that such dynamic active control of the nanoscale interaction of light with nanostructured materials, which can potentially be ultrafast, will open up diverse applications in nanooptics and the related technologies.

Methods

Near-field microscopy

The microscope is a commercial s-SNOM system (neaspec.com), which has been described in detail elsewhere. A probing s or p linearly polarized CO2 laser is focused on the tip–sample interface at an angle of 45° from the sample surface. The scattered field is acquired using a phase modulation, or pseudoheterodyne interferometry. The background signal is suppressed by vertical tip oscillation at the mechanical resonance frequency of the cantilever (f0 ~ 285 kHz) and demodulation of the detector signal at higher harmonics nf0 (commonly n = 2, 3) of the tip resonance frequency. The combined scattered field from the tip and the reference beam pass through a linear polarizer which further selects the p/s polarization of the measured signal for analysis.

Sample fabrication

Amorphous vanadium dioxide films nominally 100 nm thick were deposited on a silicon (100) substrates by electron beam evaporation of a V2O4 powder precursor29. Annealing at 45 °C in 250 mTorr oxygen crystallized the amorphous films into switching VO2 with 67 °C phase-transition temperature. A poly(methyl methacrylate) resist (PMMA 495 A4 from Microchem) was spun onto the VO2 films before fabricating the antenna arrays by electron beam lithography with a Raith eLINE system. After development of the resist, 50 nm of gold was deposited by thermal evaporation; the remaining resist was removed by lift-off in warm acetone.

Numerical calculations

Experimental results are theoretically interpreted with the aid of finite difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations (Lumerical Inc., lumerical.com). For all simulations each Au rod has dimensions l = 2512 nm, w = 232 nm and h = 30 nm. These dimensions were averaged from topography scan measurements. Each particle is simulated atop a VO2 substrate. The optical excitation source used for the simulation is a mid infrared (10.7 μm) plane wave. The simulation is performed by assuming a uniform VO2 film with complex dielectric constant ε = 4.9 for the monoclinic insulating phase and ε = −35 + 119i for the rutile metallic phase at λ = 10.7 m30. The simulation is performed using both s/s and s/p polarization selective excitation-detection methods.

Additional Information

How to cite this article: Abate, Y. et al. Control of plasmonic nanoantennas by reversible metal-insulator transition. Sci. Rep. 5, 13997; doi: 10.1038/srep13997 (2015).