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Femtosecond visualization of oxygen vacancies in metal oxides
Author(s) -
Xinping Zhang,
Fawei Tang,
Meng Wang,
Wangbin Zhan,
Huaxin Hu,
Yurong Li,
Richard H. Friend,
Xiaoyan Song
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aax9427
Subject(s) - metastability , oxygen , materials science , vacancy defect , chemical physics , metal , spectroscopy , crystal (programming language) , crystal structure , oxygen atom , femtosecond , excited state , tungsten , crystallography , atomic physics , chemistry , physics , molecule , laser , optics , computer science , metallurgy , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , programming language
Oxygen vacancies often determine the electronic structure of metal oxides, but existing techniques cannot distinguish the oxygen-vacancy sites in the crystal structure. We report here that time-resolved optical spectroscopy can solve this challenge and determine the spatial locations of oxygen vacancies. Using tungsten oxides as examples, we identified the true oxygen-vacancy sites in WO and WO, typical derivatives of WO and determined their fingerprint optoelectronic features. We find that a metastable band with a three-stage evolution dynamics of the excited states is present in WO but is absent in WO. By comparison with model bandstructure calculations, this enables determination of the most closely neighbored oxygen-vacancy pairs in the crystal structure of WO, for which two oxygen vacancies are ortho-positioned to a single W atom as a sole configuration among all O─W bonds. These findings verify the existence of preference rules of oxygen vacancies in metal oxides.

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