Infrared probe of ultrahigh-quality nanoribbon resonators

(Nanowerk News) Using the Advanced Light Source (ALS), researchers found that ribbon-like thin films, grown through a bottom-up, self-assembly approach, can act as ultrahigh-quality nanoscale resonators of lattice vibrations at infrared frequencies(ACS Nano, "Ultrahigh-Quality Infrared Polaritonic Resonators Based on Bottom-Up-Synthesized van der Waals Nanoribbons,").
These ultrathin nanostructures are ideal platforms for applications that harness infrared light, such as thermal emission and molecular sensing.
 Synthesis of molybdenum oxide micro- and nanostructures using flame vapor deposition
Top: Synthesis of molybdenum oxide (MoO3) micro- and nanostructures using flame vapor deposition (FVD). The structures were dry-transferred to a target substrate and characterized with infrared (IR) light focused by an atomic force microscope (AFM) tip. Bottom: Scanning electron microscope images of MoO3 samples (microplates, nanoribbons, and nanowires) prepared under different FVD conditions.

Crystals that vibe with infrared light

Optoelectronic devices combine electronics with optical (light-based) phenomena such as reflection, refraction, and interference. By exploiting these unique properties of light, optoelectronic devices can be small, fast, and extremely sensitive to subtle changes in their surroundings. For light in the infrared regime, applications include systems for subwavelength imaging, thermal emission, and molecular sensing.
Because infrared wavelengths are relatively long (generally on the order of microns), scientists need a way to downsize the light in order to work with device components at the nanoscale. Some thin-film nanostructures, called van der Waals (vdW) materials, effectively compress infrared wavelengths up to hundreds of times. These materials support strong resonances between infrared photons and crystal-lattice vibrations (phonons), effectively forming hybrid photon–phonon quasiparticles known as phonon polaritons.
The vdW materials that support phonon polaritons possess extraordinary light-confinement capabilities, but to be fully utilized, they require defect-free crystallinity and nanostructured form factors.

Scalable synthesis of nanoresonators

In this work, researchers synthesized phonon polaritonic vdW materials with tailorable morphologies and crystal qualities consistent with bulk single crystals. The bottom-up, self-assembly approach they developed—flame vapor deposition (FVD)—is noteworthy for its rapid growth rates, low cost, high scalability, and atmospheric operating conditions. It represents a significant advance over current mechanical exfoliation methods, which are labor intensive and unsystematic, or slower vapor deposition techniques that are costly and require potentially damaging lithography treatments.
Sacnning synthesized MoO3 nanoribbons  for phonon polariton resonances in both the [001] (lengthwise) and [100] (crosswise) directions
Synthesized MoO3 nanoribbons were scanned for phonon polariton resonances in both the [001] (lengthwise) and [100] (crosswise) directions.
Using FVD, the group was able to grow microplates, nanoribbons, and nanowires of molybdenum oxide (MoO3), a particularly interesting vdW phonon polaritonic material exhibiting properties potentially useful for tuning and routing polaritons. Sample morphology was controlled through variations in temperature, molybdenum concentration, and time.
The nanoribbons, having exceptionally smooth, parallel edges that act as reflecting surfaces, naturally function as ideal resonating cavities for infrared phonon–polariton standing waves. Probing these resonances with synchrotron infrared nanospectroscopy (SINS) provided a way to measure the quality of these nanoresonators.

Resonance mapping with SINS

The broadband IR light provided by ALS Beamline 2.4 enabled the researchers to map phonon polariton resonances spanning mid- to far-IR wavelengths, covering four distinct frequency bands (Reststrahlen bands) where resonances occur. The beamline’s unique far-IR photodetector was key to collecting data at the lowest-energy band.
In addition, the researchers used Beamline 5.4, which covers the mid-IR range as well but with much higher spectral resolution than found in typical commercial systems—by almost a factor of 10.
The resulting resonance maps fully characterize for the first time the broadband infrared response of FVD-synthesized MoO3 nanoribbons along the two in-plane axes, detecting resonance modes beyond the 10th order. The resonances are much stronger and more discernible than those from nanostructures prepared using alternative methods.
Reststrahlen bands (RBs) in MoO3
(a) The four Reststrahlen bands (RBs) in MoO3 (indicated by shading) that are accessible with broadband infrared light from Beamline 2.4. (b) AFM (top) and single-frequency SINS (bottom) images of the nanoribbon used in SINS analysis. Scale bar = 500 nm. (c) SINS resonance maps show the succession of standing-wave modes that occur as the infrared frequency increases. The top image corresponds to a horizontal scan through the ribbon and the bottom image corresponds to a vertical scan. (d) Higher-resolution horizontal (top) and vertical (bottom) scans of the mid-infrared RB (RBZ2) from Beamline 5.4. White arrows indicate locations where crosscuts in the spectra were taken for the calculation of Q-factors.
A measure of resonator quality can be derived by taking crosscuts of the experimental data (along constant x- or y-positions) and fitting them with multiple Lorentzian peaks (a standard shape for spectral lines). The quality factors (Q-factors) thus obtained are the highest reported for a phonon polariton resonator to date—clear evidence of the high crystal quality of the synthesized nanoribbons. In sum, bottom-up-synthesized polaritonic vdW nanostructures are good prospects for high-performance, low-loss infrared optical and optoelectronic applications.
Source: Advanced Light Source
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