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Dual-Hyperspectral Optical Pump-Probe Microscopy with Single-Nanosecond Time Resolution.
Li, Bowen; Xu, Joy; Kocoj, Conrad A; Li, Shunran; Li, Yanyan; Chen, Du; Zhang, Shuchen; Dou, Letian; Guo, Peijun.
Affiliation
  • Li B; Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, United States.
  • Xu J; Energy Sciences Institute, Yale University, West Haven, Connecticut 06516, United States.
  • Kocoj CA; Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, United States.
  • Li S; Energy Sciences Institute, Yale University, West Haven, Connecticut 06516, United States.
  • Li Y; Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, United States.
  • Chen D; Energy Sciences Institute, Yale University, West Haven, Connecticut 06516, United States.
  • Zhang S; Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, United States.
  • Dou L; Energy Sciences Institute, Yale University, West Haven, Connecticut 06516, United States.
  • Guo P; Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, United States.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(3): 2187-2195, 2024 Jan 24.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38216555
ABSTRACT
In recent years, optical pump-probe microscopy (PPM) has become a vital technique for spatiotemporally imaging electronic excitations and charge-carrier transport in metals and semiconductors. However, existing methods are limited by mechanical delay lines with a probe time window up to several nanoseconds (ns) or monochromatic pump and probe sources with restricted spectral coverage and temporal resolution, hindering their amenability in studying relatively slow processes. To bridge these gaps, we introduce a dual-hyperspectral PPM setup with a time window spanning from nanoseconds to milliseconds and single-nanosecond resolution. Our method features a wide-field probe tunable from 370 to 1000 nm and a pump spanning from 330 nm to 16 µm. We apply this PPM technique to study various two-dimensional metal-halide perovskites (2D-MHPs) as representative semiconductors by imaging their transient responses near the exciton resonances under both above-band gap electronic pump excitation and below-band gap vibrational pump excitation. The resulting spatially and temporally resolved images reveal insights into heat dissipation, film uniformity, distribution of impurity phases, and film-substrate interfaces. In addition, the single-nanosecond temporal resolution enables the imaging of in-plane strain wave propagation in 2D-MHP single crystals. Our method, which offers extensive spectral tunability and significantly improved time resolution, opens new possibilities for the imaging of charge carriers, heat, and transient phase transformation processes, particularly in materials with spatially varying composition, strain, crystalline structure, and interfaces.

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Language: En Year: 2024 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Language: En Year: 2024 Type: Article