Abstract

Hydrogen donor doping of correlated electron systems such as vanadium dioxide (VO2) profoundly modifies the ground state properties. The electrical behavior of HxVO2 is strongly dependent on the hydrogen concentration; hence, atomic scale control of the doping process is necessary. It is however a nontrivial problem to quantitatively probe the hydrogen distribution in a solid matrix. As hydrogen transfers its sole electron to the material, the ionization mechanism is suppressed. In this study, a methodology mapping the doping distribution at subnanometer length scale is demonstrated across a HxVO2 thin film focusing on the oxygen-hydrogen bonds using electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) coupled with first-principles EELS calculations. The hydrogen distribution was revealed to be nonuniform along the growth direction and between different VO2 grains, calling for intricate hydrogenation mechanisms. Our study points to a powerful approach to quantitatively map dopant distribution in quantum materials relevant to energy and information sciences.

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