Affiliation:
1. A.V. Rzhanov Institute of Semiconductor Physics SB RAS
2. A.V. Nikolaev Institute of Inorganic Chemistry SB RAS
Abstract
The electrical parameters of the semiconductor-metal phase transition in vanadium dioxide nanostructures synthesized by chemical vapor deposition on a silicon substrate (100) and decorated with gold nanoparticles with a surface concentration from 3∙109 to 3∙1010 cm–2 are studied. X-ray phase analysis revealed that the synthesized nanostructures of vanadium dioxide contain a monoclinic M1 phase undergoing a phase transition at a temperature of about 68 °C. The morphology of the surface of vanadium dioxide nanostructures coated with gold nanoparticles was studied using a scanning electron microscope and an atomic force microscope. The characteristics of the temperature phase transition of the initial nanostructures and nanostructures decorated with gold nanoparticles are determined. The temperature dependence of the resistance near the phase transition point of the initial nanostructures showed that the resistance jump is about four orders of magnitude, which confirms their high quality. It is shown that an increase in the surface concentration of gold particles to a value of 3∙1010 cm–2 increases the conductivity of vanadium dioxide at room temperature by about two times, and shifts the phase transition temperature by 5 °C: from 68 °C to 63 °C. Optical switching in vanadium dioxide with an array of gold particles with a size of 9 nm is considered by numerical modeling methods. It is established that the response of the electromagnetic wave from the VO2 material during the phase transition is enhanced due to the excitation of localized plasmon resonance in gold nanoparticles and reaches a local maximum in the region of 600 nm. Additionally, this effect is enhanced at angles of incidence near the pseudo-Brewster angle for vanadium dioxide. The considered hybrid VO2–Au nanostructures are promising as basic nanoelements for next-generation computers, as well as for ultrafast and highly sensitive sensors.
Publisher
Novosibirsk State University (NSU)