Researchers
from Lehigh University and the Swiss Federal Institute
of Technology in Zurich (ETH) have reported unprecedented
nonlinear optical efficiency in some small organic
molecules that makes the molecules potentially useful
for optical computing, optical
data processing, and optical telecommunication.
In
an article to be published Nov. 15 in the journal
Optics Letters, the researchers say that the optical
nonlinearities of the molecules are “extraordinarily
large relative to the small molecular mass of the
molecules and are within a factor of 50 from the
fundamental quantum limit.”
“We have found that donor-substituted cyanoethynylethene
molecules…show one of the strongest [nonlinear optical
responses], if not the strongest nonlinear response
observed to date, when expressed both in terms of
[their] proximity to the fundamental limit and in
terms of their specific third-order polarizability.
“These
facts, combined with the compatibility of these
molecules with vapor- deposition methods, make
them a very interesting system [for] the development
of efficient and flexible elements for integrated
nonlinear optics.”
This
development, the researchers say, is necessary
for optical computing and for the direct processing
of information in an all-optical network. Such
a network requires efficient “optical transistors” that
increase bandwidth and avoid the time-consuming and
inefficient conversions of optical signals to electronic
signals and back that are now necessary in the Internet
and other networks.
The
article is titled “Highly Efficient Third-Order
Optical Nonlinearities in Donor-Substituted Cyanoethynylethene
Molecules.”
A nonlinear optical response occurs in a material
when the intensity of light alters the properties
of the material through which light is passing, affecting,
in turn, the manner in which the light propagates.
A “third order” optical
nonlinearity is a measure of how well matter can
mediate the interaction of different light waves.
The fundamental limit, or maximum possible nonlinear-optical
susceptibility of molecules allowed by quantum
mechanics, was calculated by Washington State University
physicist Mark Kuzyk in 2000 and is known as the
Kuzyk Limit.
Ivan Biaggio, professor of physics and member of
Lehigh's Center for Optical Technologies, said the
nonlinear susceptibility of the CEE molecules investigated
by his group approaches the Kuzyk Limit.
“These molecules, in contrast to many that have
been previously reported, come very close to the
Kuzyk Limit,” said Biaggio. “They come within a factor
of 50, and it is astonishing to get that close in
a real system, given that the fundamental limit is
obtained assuming that all molecular properties are
ideal at the same time.”
Third-order optical nonlinearities occur when three
photons, or light packets, enter a material and interact,
producing a fourth photon that may have a different
wavelength and color, or a different propagation
direction. Materials with third-order nonlinear responses
are required for all-optical networks and devices
in which light waves, not electronics, perform switching,
routing, amplification and other functions. These
developments could lead to much more efficient ways
to route signals between fibers and communication
channels, which in turn could speed up, by orders
of magnitude, the rate at which information is transmitted
and processed.
Biaggio said the ETH researchers have synthesized
several variants of donor substituted cyanoethynylethene
(CEE) molecules and the Lehigh researchers have conducted
physical experiments to determine the efficiency
with which the molecules lead to multi-photon interactions.
In their experiments, the researchers applied a
tool called Degenerate Four-Wave Mixing at wavelengths
ranging from the visible to the near and far infrared
to determine how the CEE molecule interacts simultaneously
with three photons to generate a fourth photon.
The optical nonlinearity of organic molecules can
be influenced by, among other things, the manner
in which atomic groups that act as electron acceptors
or electron donors are arranged around a molecular
backbone containing delocalized electrons. The researchers
varied the geometrical arrangement of donors around
the X-shaped core of the CEE molecule.
“We have experimented with different geometrical
arrangements of donors in order to better understand
how the nonlinearity arises,” said Biaggio, who holds
a doctorate from ETH and is a former team leader
in ETH's Nonlinear Optics Laboratory.
“It
was like building a variety of figures with the
same few Lego blocks. Thanks to our experiments,
we have improved our ability to predict the effect
of different configurations of these blocks on the
nonlinearity of the overall molecule.”
Joshua May, a graduate student in Biaggio's group,
used a tunable laser which is capable of emitting
short light pulses along the spectrum of visible
and invisible light, to determine the nonlinear optical
properties of the CEE molecules, Biaggio said.
“We have measured the nonlinear response of the
molecules along the spectrum of wavelengths ranging
from 500 nanometers to 1.6 microns,” he said. “The
tunable laser enables us to go to the physically
meaningful regions of the lightwave spectrum, to
move to wherever we need to be, in order to study
things like two-photon absorption or the so-called ‘non-resonant'
molecular response that occurs only at sufficiently
long wavelengths in the infrared.
“This
makes it possible to compare the different molecules
that are studied in various research groups and
determine which ones have the best nonlinear susceptibility,
because material properties change along the wavelength
spectrum.”
The
family of donor-substituted CEE molecules is characterized
by small size and by high density of nonlinearity – important
properties, said Biaggio, that may make it easier
to assemble the molecules into useful materials.
“It
is not enough if a molecule has a high optical
nonlinearity. It must also be possible to assemble
it efficiently into a useful solid-state material.
The small size and robustness of these new molecules
that we studied enables us to use various interesting
technologies to assemble them. For example, they
can be evaporated into a gas and vapor-deposited,
making it easy to process them into a stable solid-state
materials which we can expect to have extremely
high bulk nonlinear optical susceptibility.”
Source :
Kurt Pfitzer, Lehigh University, 610-758-3017
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