| Literature DB >> 27400385 |
Hyojin Yoon1, Minseok Choi2,3, Tae-Won Lim2, Hyunah Kwon1, Kyuwook Ihm4, Jong Kyu Kim1, Si-Young Choi2, Junwoo Son1.
Abstract
Hydrogen, the smallest and the lightest atomic element, is reversibly incorporated into interstitial sites in vanadium dioxide (VO2), a correlated oxide with a 3d(1) electronic configuration, and induces electronic phase modulation. It is widely reported that low hydrogen concentrations stabilize the metallic phase, but the understanding of hydrogen in the high doping regime is limited. Here, we demonstrate that as many as two hydrogen atoms can be incorporated into each VO2 unit cell, and that hydrogen is reversibly absorbed into, and released from, VO2 without destroying its lattice framework. This hydrogenation process allows us to elucidate electronic phase modulation of vanadium oxyhydride, demonstrating two-step insulator (VO2)-metal (HxVO2)-insulator (HVO2) phase modulation during inter-integer d-band filling. Our finding suggests the possibility of reversible and dynamic control of topotactic phase modulation in VO2 and opens up the potential application in proton-based Mottronics and novel hydrogen storage.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27400385 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841