Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Spectroscopy of the instantaneous all-optical switching nonlinearity of thin films F.P. Strohkendl, R.J. Larsen, L.R. Dalton, University of Southern California Z.K. Kafafi Naval Research Laboratory “All-optical switching” “Linear” optical properties are intensity dependent : n(I) n0 n2 I (I) 0 2 I Nonlinear phase shift: Hope for fNL 2 n2 IL I1sin2(fNLf0) - fast all-optical switching L -”Packet switching” Nonlinear Material I I I2 cos2(fNLf0) Mechanisms contributing to n2 slow Electronic excitation Nuclear movement/alignment Distortion of electronic wave function “instantaneous, electronic nonlinearity” n 80 12 0 80 80 0 10 0 20 0 time (fs) 30 0 "integrating" 40 0 0 small 12 0 40 40 large fast n "instantaneous" n n 12 0 n2 Relaxation Heating 0 0 10 0 20 0 time (fs) 30 0 0 10 0 20 0 time (fs) Short-pulse experiments favor “instantaneous” electronic nonlinearity 30 0 Phase-mismatched DFWM: Amplitude and phase of c(3) [F. P. Strohkendl et al., J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 14, 92 (1997)] Sample Ls B T hin Film Sample 2 3 E Ls / Lfilm 102-103 1 A Lfilm |c(3)|2 Observation Plane Signal, A Film, B or E • Diffraction Thin Film: Raman-Nath, Thick Substrate: Bragg Substrate Signal addition 48 2 n2 2 Rec 1111( , , , ) n0 c DFWM is directly related to all-optical switching para2 48 2 2 Imc 1111( , , , ) meters 2 c n0 c Four-wave mixing signals under absorptive / non-absorptive conditions Absorptive, 2500 cm-1 Non-absorptive A , C6 0 on CaF2 B, C6 0 on CaF2 E, C6 0 on CaF2 A , CaF2 6 4 B, c DFWM in C 60 at 690 nm 1.2 1.0 DFWM Signal four wave mixing sig nal ( relat ive unit s) 8 2 1 0.8 0.6 E 0.4 c 3 A, c 0.2 2 A: beam 1 delayed 0.0 B: beam 1 delayed E: beam-500 3 delayed0 -40 0 -20 0 0 2 00 500 1000 1500 Beam Delay (fs) 4 00 beam delay ( f s) •Femtosecond pulses under absorptive conditions are NOT sufficient to measure instantaneous response “Instantaneous,” electronic c(3) c(432) = (3) abc b c a fabc (23) g all states 4 g | r | c c | r | b b | r | a a | r | g Ne ... c(3) ( 4 , 3 , 2 , 1 ) F 3 a, b, c cg 3 2 1 i cg bg 3 2 i bg ag 3 i ag where a | r | g Transition dipole moment, ag = Transition energy, ag Transition linewidth. Internal transition energies are revealed through multi-photon resonances – THG : (432)(3) , 1-, 2-, and 3-photon resonances – DFWM: (432)() , only 1-, and 2-photon resonances Example: DFWM vs. Third Harmonic Generation in C60 DFW M, Strohkendl '96 THG 100 • Third Harmonic Generation 9 8 (THG) and DFWM spectra are unrelated. •Two-photon resonance observed with DFWM remains undetected by THG. 7 |c |(03 esu) 6 5 4 3 2 10 9 8 7 0.5 1.0 1.5 wavelength (µm) 2.0 2.5 Exploration of the instantaneous nonlinearity under absorptive conditions Why? The all-optical switching behavior is determined once all one- and two-photon resonances are known! c two-photon state b (3) a a,b,c c ground state Two-Photon Term - a,b a b ground state One-Photon Term Problem: DFWM signal under resonant conditions is dominated by (non-instantaneous) sample excitation ! Solution: Two-color FWM. Nearly degenerate four-wave mixing (nDFWM) suppresses non-instantaneous response • Amplitude of excited state Kg = | K1-K2 | population rating is reduced due to moving grating by N N0 Pulse Moving Grating K1 , Pulse Exci tation •Example 0.1eV, P ul se 100 fs Integration 7 fs K2 Doppler shifted Signal (3) cinstantaneous ( ,, , ) c (3)[( ), , ,( )] for << = transition linewidth nDFWM Geometry B 2 Thin Film Sample E 3 A 1 2 3 B 1 2 3 1 A Observation Plane •3-beam signals at A, B, and E •Measure thin film at B, and thick fused silica reference at A •Fused Silica: n2 = 3.0 x 10-16 cm2/W Comparison of nDFWM/DFWM in C60 4 ps DFWM, Flom 92 2 DFWM/ NDFWM in C (absorptive conditions) 1.2 6 nDFWM fs DFWM fs DFWM es u) 4 0.8 0.6 0.4 2 -13 c1111 (10 DFWM Signal 8 at 690 nm non-instantaneous instantaneous x 20 1.0 1000 60 fs DFWM, Rosker 92 100 8 6 17000 cm 4 0.2 0.0 -1 2500 cm -1 -500 0 500 1000 1500 Beam Delay (fs) 2 •DFWM signal under absorptive conditions 10 8 is unrelated to instantaneous response 6 4 0.50 0.60 0.70 0.80 wavelength (µm) 0.90 1.00 Exploring the Absorption Spectrum? Absorption Spectrum of C60 80x10 3 2.5 Film Thickness: O.16 µm 60 absorption (cm -1 ) 2.0 1.5 1.0 40 20 0.5 0 0.0 200 400 600 800 400 500 600 wavelength (nm) Full UV-Vis Spectrum Explored Region 700 800 Conclusion 1- and 2-photon resonances determine the “instantaneous” all-optical switching parameters (n2, 2) of a material. DFWM / nDFWM are uniquely suited to explore the unknown 2-photon spectrum. Used nDFWM successfully to suppress non instantaneous response ( < 14000 cm-1). Implemented new method for two-color femtosecond-pulse generation. Tunable femtosecond light source: 0.45-3.2 µm Nd:YAG Pump Femtosecond Oscillator Mira 900 by Coherent Ti:Sapphire 76 MHz, 10 nJ, 100-180 fs, 720-980 nm Ar-ion Pump Laser Grating Stretcher grating:1800 l/mm 100fs -> 100ps Two Stage Optical Parametric Amplifier 0.45 - 3.2 µm, 60 µJ ±2% rms 50 - 120fs Second Harmonic Generator Continuum Generator Prism Compressor idler signal DFWM Experiment Regenerative Amplifier Ti:Sapphire, 20 Hz 740-880 nm 2 mJ ±0.4% rms Grating Compressor 1800 l/mm, 100ps -> 100fs, 0.8 mJ sech2 transform limited Automated femtosecond optical parametric generator/amplifier 0.45-3.2 µm Group velocity dispersion 0.4 mm BBO BBO,OPA Fused Silica Dispersive delay BBO, OPA 0.7 mJ±0.4% rms 0.79µm BBO,SHG £ 60µJ Signal+Idler ±2% rms 0.45-0.75µm 0.85-3.2µm Dual color generation for nDFWM in a single femtosecond Optical Parametric Amplifier Group velocity dispersion 0.4 mm x BBO Input 0.8 mJ 790 nm from Regen 395 nm SHG Continuum Output -7 µJ per color - 0.1eV BBO 1 BBO 2 Dispersive Delay Line