| Literature DB >> 30932221 |
Xinzhong Chen1, Debo Hu2, Ryan Mescall1, Guanjun You3, D N Basov4, Qing Dai2, Mengkun Liu1.
Abstract
Infrared and optical spectroscopy represents one of the most informative methods in advanced materials research. As an important branch of modern optical techniques that has blossomed in the past decade, scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) promises deterministic characterization of optical properties over a broad spectral range at the nanoscale. It allows ultrabroadband optical (0.5-3000 µm) nanoimaging, and nanospectroscopy with fine spatial (<10 nm), spectral (<1 cm-1 ), and temporal (<10 fs) resolution. The history of s-SNOM is briefly introduced and recent advances which broaden the horizons of this technique in novel material research are summarized. In particular, this includes the pioneering efforts to study the nanoscale electrodynamic properties of plasmonic metamaterials, strongly correlated quantum materials, and polaritonic systems at room or cryogenic temperatures. Technical details, theoretical modeling, and new experimental methods are also discussed extensively, aiming to identify clear technology trends and unsolved challenges in this exciting field of research.Entities:
Keywords: SNOM; infrared; near-field microscope; near-field optics; s-SNOM; terahertz
Year: 2019 PMID: 30932221 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201804774
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 32.086