• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 6
  • 4
  • 4
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 18
  • 18
  • 6
  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Estudo das propriedades ópticas lineares e não-lineares de cristais de l-alanina, l-treonina e l-lisina / Linear and nonlinear optical properties study of l-alanine, l-treonine and l-lisine crystals

Misoguti, Lino 18 March 1999 (has links)
Neste trabalho estudamos uma nova classe de materiais ópticos não-lineares, os cristais orgânicos, que possuem potencial para muitas aplicação em dispositivos. Determinamos diferentes propriedades ópticas lineares e não-lineares de três cristais orgânicos: a l-alanina, a l-treonina e a l-lisina. Esses cristais de aminoácido foram escolhidos por apresentarem propriedades de geração de segundo harmônico (GSH) e por serem materiais nunca estudados sob o ponto de vista da óptica não-linear. Estudamos algumas das propriedades ópticas lineares fundamentais desses cristais biaxiais transparentes, pois deles dependem os fenômenos não-lineares sobre os quais são feitas intensas pesquisas. Determinamos as propriedades lineares como os espectros de absorção, os índices de refração, os eixo ópticos, velocidade de propagação da luz num meio anisotrópico e os limiares de dano por radiação. Posteriormente, determinamos as condições de casamento de fase, a eficiência de GSH, e a auto-modulação de fase. A GSH e a auto-modulação de fase pertencem, respectivamente, a processos não-lineares de segunda e de terceira-ordem. Para o estudo de muitas dessas propriedades foram desenvolvidas novas técnicas experimentais. Uma dessas novas técnicas, a varredura-Z oscilante, teve sensibilidade para determinar, pela primeira vez, o índice de refração não oscilante, vez, o índice de refração não linear desses cristais orgânicos. Além disso, como a todos os processos de caracterização envolveram a preparação de amostras, tivemos a oportunidade de criar procedimentos padrões para manipulação e utilização desses novos materiais. / In this work we studied a new class of nonlinear organic crystals that are potential candidates for devices application. We determined several linear and nonlinear optical properties of three organic crystals: l-alanine, l-threonine and l-lysine. These aminoacid. These aminoacid because their nonlinearities were never studied before. We characterized some of the fundamental linear optical properties of these biaxial transparent crystals, because they have influence on nonlinear phenomena that attracted a lot of research. We determined linear properties like absorption spectra, indices of refraction, optical axes, the light speed propagation in anisotropy media and the optical damage threshold. Subsequently, we determined the phase-matching condition for SHG, efficiency of the SHG and self-phase modulation. The SHG and self-phase modulation belongs, respectively, to the second-order and third-order nonlinear processes. To study several of these properties we had to develop some new experimental techniques. One of them, the oscillatory Z-scan, allows enough sensibility to determine, for the first time, the nonlinear refraction index of these organic crystals. Besides, as all these optical characterization involve the preparation of the samples, we had the opportunity to establishing standard procedures for manipulation of these new materials.
12

Estudo das propriedades ópticas lineares e não-lineares de cristais de l-alanina, l-treonina e l-lisina / Linear and nonlinear optical properties study of l-alanine, l-treonine and l-lisine crystals

Lino Misoguti 18 March 1999 (has links)
Neste trabalho estudamos uma nova classe de materiais ópticos não-lineares, os cristais orgânicos, que possuem potencial para muitas aplicação em dispositivos. Determinamos diferentes propriedades ópticas lineares e não-lineares de três cristais orgânicos: a l-alanina, a l-treonina e a l-lisina. Esses cristais de aminoácido foram escolhidos por apresentarem propriedades de geração de segundo harmônico (GSH) e por serem materiais nunca estudados sob o ponto de vista da óptica não-linear. Estudamos algumas das propriedades ópticas lineares fundamentais desses cristais biaxiais transparentes, pois deles dependem os fenômenos não-lineares sobre os quais são feitas intensas pesquisas. Determinamos as propriedades lineares como os espectros de absorção, os índices de refração, os eixo ópticos, velocidade de propagação da luz num meio anisotrópico e os limiares de dano por radiação. Posteriormente, determinamos as condições de casamento de fase, a eficiência de GSH, e a auto-modulação de fase. A GSH e a auto-modulação de fase pertencem, respectivamente, a processos não-lineares de segunda e de terceira-ordem. Para o estudo de muitas dessas propriedades foram desenvolvidas novas técnicas experimentais. Uma dessas novas técnicas, a varredura-Z oscilante, teve sensibilidade para determinar, pela primeira vez, o índice de refração não oscilante, vez, o índice de refração não linear desses cristais orgânicos. Além disso, como a todos os processos de caracterização envolveram a preparação de amostras, tivemos a oportunidade de criar procedimentos padrões para manipulação e utilização desses novos materiais. / In this work we studied a new class of nonlinear organic crystals that are potential candidates for devices application. We determined several linear and nonlinear optical properties of three organic crystals: l-alanine, l-threonine and l-lysine. These aminoacid. These aminoacid because their nonlinearities were never studied before. We characterized some of the fundamental linear optical properties of these biaxial transparent crystals, because they have influence on nonlinear phenomena that attracted a lot of research. We determined linear properties like absorption spectra, indices of refraction, optical axes, the light speed propagation in anisotropy media and the optical damage threshold. Subsequently, we determined the phase-matching condition for SHG, efficiency of the SHG and self-phase modulation. The SHG and self-phase modulation belongs, respectively, to the second-order and third-order nonlinear processes. To study several of these properties we had to develop some new experimental techniques. One of them, the oscillatory Z-scan, allows enough sensibility to determine, for the first time, the nonlinear refraction index of these organic crystals. Besides, as all these optical characterization involve the preparation of the samples, we had the opportunity to establishing standard procedures for manipulation of these new materials.
13

Growth And Physical Properties Of Nonlinear Optical Crystals CsH(C4H4O5)H2O, CsLiB6O10 And Near-Stoichiometric LiNbO3

Reddy, Babu J N 05 1900 (has links)
NLO materials have been researched for nearly five decades from the point of view of understanding the basic mechanisms and also in the pursuit of new materials possessing improved properties. Materials satisfying a set of physico-chemical properties such as wide transmission range, good mechanical hardness, high po-larizablity, noncentric crystal structure, good chemical stability, etc are the ones which are sought after. Several organic and inorganic molecules have been synthe-sized with the hope of finding materials that possess the desired NLO properties. Most of the organic materials are known to possess high figure of merit. However, their poor mechanical strength and needle like growth habit are hindrances to practical applications. Inorganic NLO materials have better mechanical properties but many of them possess small deff and laser induced damage threshold. Semi-organic NLO materials are intended to have the merits of both organic and inorganic counterparts. In this investigation, three important NLO crystals, viz cesium hydrogen L-malate monohydrate (CsLM, CsH[C4H4O5]H2O), cesium lithium borate(CLBO,CsLiB6O10)and near stoichiometric lithium niobate codoped with Nd and Zn (Nd:Zn:LiNbO3)are chosen for detailed study. The thesis is organized into 6 chapters. First chapter contains the theoretical background of the physical and chemical phenomena including a review of nonlin-ear optics, second harmonic generation, multiphoton absorption & refraction con-cepts, single crystal growth, principles of ferroelectricity and the scope of the work involved. For better connectivity, a brief review of the earlier work carried out on the chosen materials is given in the beginning of each chapter. The second chapter discusses the methodology of work and experimental details used in the present study. The third chapter deals with studies on CsLM, the new organometallic NLO crystal. Its structure, electro-optical properties and dielectric properties in FIR region are reported very recently. This material is also reported to show a phase transition at 50 0C though not much is understood about its nature. Further details of crystal growth conditions, nonlinear optical properties and laser damage thresholds are little known on this newly discovered NLO material. In this chapter detailed crystal growth studies and investigations of physical properties are presented. During growth, CsLM crystals manifest in platy and prismatic morphologies depending on level of super saturation invoked. The maximum dimensions of the grown crystal are 20 x15 x35 mm3. It has very good transmission in the range, 250-1300 nm and dislocation density of ≈104/cm2 . The dc conductivity measurements place this crystal between an ionic conductor and a dielectric. Dielectric properties show considerable frequency dispersion and axial anisotropy with є′ being the highest along the polar b axis. Maker fringes experiment reveals that CsLM possesses good second harmonic generation efficiency, an order of magnitude higher than KDP. It also has high laser damage threshold for fundamental and second harmonic wavelengths of Nd:YAG pulsed laser. TGA/DTA experiments are performed on the crystals grown below and above the reported transition temperature(labelled as CsLM and Anhydrous-CsLM respectively). The present investigations on Anhydrous-CsLM show that it crystallizes in a structure different from that of CsLM and the nature of the reported ′phase transition ′is driven by sluggish hydration and dehydration processes. Recently UV transparent nonlinear optical materials were evaluated for the fab-rication of all solid state UVlasers and CLBO is one such NLO material. It crystal-lizes in non-centrosymmetric tetragonal space group, I42d. It is highly transparent in the wide range of wavelengths from 180 to 2500 nm and has good deff. It pos-sesses very good angular and spectral bandwidth tolerances compared to its contemporaries such as lithium triborate(LBO) and beta barium borate(β-BBO). There is, however, a problem associated with this material that it cracks when exposed to atmosphere due to its hygroscopic nature. This chapter details the fabrication of the required instrumentation to grow single crystals of this material and the study of possible solutions to avoid cracking problem besides its new nonlinear properties. Since the melts of borate materials are known to be highly viscous, the crystal growth apparatus should have the options for tuning the parameters like seed and crucible rotation rates, temperature isotherms, slow pulling rate, etc. Keeping the above in mind, a high temperature top seeded solution growth unit was designed and fabricated inhouse. Highly transparent single crystals of CLBO were grown using the above unit which were characterized for the defects/dislocations using X-ray topography. The average dislocation density estimated is ≈103/cm2. The nonlinear optical absorption(NLA) and refraction(NLR) properties are studied. Z-scan experiments reveal that five photon absorption(5PA )is responsible for nonlinear absorption when the wavelength and pulse width are 800 nm and 110 fs respectively. For 532 nm and 6 ns pulses, dielectric breakdown occurs before NLA could occur due to high pulse influence. CLBO is found to show negative nonlinear refraction under high intensities. Hygroscopicity of CLBO is attributed to the entry of water through the channels that are present along a and b axes, which in turn, cause cracking. Doping, is expected to modify the size of the channels. Since certain dopants are found to improve the stability of CLBO, substitution of Cs site with Zn and Gd is carried out to reduce the size of channels. As there was no significant improvement with doping experiments, an alternate approach is attempted by coating with SiO2 thin films on the optical elements to prevent the water molecules from entering lattice through the channels. The results and discussion of the above studies are presented in the chapter 4. Lithium niobate is the most widely used single crystal for fabricating optical modulators, waveguides, SAW devices and optical parametric oscillators. Although single crystals of this ferroelectric material were grown way back in 1965 by Ball-man and Fedulov independently, most of the work till the beginning of 90’s was concentrated on crystals with congruent composition(CLN) because there were no suitable methods available for growing homogeneous single crystals of stoichiomet-ric lithium niobate(SLN). Recently, Double Crucible Czochralski method with au-tomatic powder feeding technique and top seeded solution growth technique with Li2O and K2O fluxes are shown to produce SLN crystals. In this work, top seeded solution growth technique with58.6 mol% Li2O composition(self flux) is adopted to grow SLN crystals and the details of the growth and investigations are presented in chapter 5. Initially, crystal growth of SLN, and Zn & Nd codoped SLN are de-scribed. The maximum dimesions of the SLN crystals are 20 mm diameter and 35 mm length. CLN crystals(30mm diameter and 70 mm length) are also grown for comparison. The growth rate for SLN crystals is approximately 25 times lower than that for CLN. The maximum amount of Zn added to the melt is 2.5 mol%. For Nd codoping, four concentrations (0.2, 0.5, 0.9, 1.5 mol%) have been chosen with Zn concentration in the melt fixed at 2.5 mol%. Addition of Zn is to enhance the pho-torefractive damage threshold and Nd to use SLN as laser host. Structural studies on the grown crystals using powder X-ray diffraction show no additional phases. The domain structure analysis by chemical etching studies reveal that it is sensitive to doping and temperature gradient above the melt surface. The grown crystals possess good transmission in the UV-Vis-NIR region. Apparent increase in the dielectric constant found in doped crystals is attributed to space charge effect. In Nd:Zn codoped SLN, the parameters corresponding to lasing (Judd-Ofelt parameters, radiative transition probabilities, branching ratios) have been evaluated and found to be better than those obtained for codoped CLN. Surface laser damage and photorefractive damage thresholds are enhanced by 2 and 4 orders of magnitude respectively for the crystals grown with 2.5 mol% Zn in the melt. Nonlinear absorption and refraction studies using femtosecond Z-scan experiments reveal a correlation between the nonstoichiometric defects and nonlinear absorption & refraction coefficients. Polarization switching studies carried out on pure and Zn doped samples indicate an enhancement in switching rate at elevated temperatures. In the sixth and final chapter, a comprehensive summary of the present work and the scope for further investigations related to this work are given.
14

Spectroscopie Raman résonnante UV in situ à haute température ou à haute pression / In situ UV resonant Raman spectroscopy at high temperature and at high pressure

Montagnac, Gilles 12 December 2012 (has links)
Dans cette thèse, la spectroscopie Raman résonante UV (SRRUV) est appliquée pour la première fois à l'étude ‘in situ’ de matériaux carbonés à très haute température (> 2000 K) ou à haute pression (< 1 GPa).La thèse est constituée de trois parties. La première aborde notre travail de caractérisation en SRRUV (1) de films semi conducteurs de diamants ultra-nano-cristalins, (2) des kérogènes issues de météorites chondritiques et de charbons, et (3) des tholins, échantillons de carbone-hydrogène-azote, synthétisés comme analogues de l'atmosphère de Titan.L’intérêt pour ces phases du carbone en planétologie et en science des matériaux nous a poussé à mettre en œuvre leur étude ‘in situ’ en SRRUV. La seconde partie de la thèse est consacrée au développement d'une platine chauffante, grâce à laquelle les spectres Raman du graphite sous sa forme pyrolitique et HOPG ont été mesurés jusqu'à 2700 K. Ces données valident les modèles anharmoniques théoriques d’interaction électron-phonon et phonon-phonon. Le spectre Raman du graphite a été étalonné en fonction de la température et devient un « thermomètre » à très haute température.Dans la troisième partie de cette thèse, une presse à enclumes opposées a été modifiée pour suivre en SRRUV les changements structuraux de cristaux moléculaires très luminescents. Les vibrations intramoléculaires du cristal de pérylène sont étudiées sous pression par SRRUV. Ce composé est un cristal formé de molécules organiques polyaromatiques, avec des propriétés de semi-conducteur. Les effets de la pression sur certains modes de vibrations sont non linéaires et mettent en évidence des changement structuraux et de planéité de la molécule. / I applied UV resonant Raman spectroscopy (UVRRS) to an ‘in situ’ study of carbon materials at very hight temperature (> 2000 K) or at high pressure (< 1 GPa).The advantages of UVRRS are presented in the first part of this PHD thesis, and used to investigate details of the composition and structure of disordered carbon materials such as: (1) n-type nanocrystalline films, (2) carbonaceous matter in chondrites and (3) tholins, HCN synthetic samples of Titan 's atmosphere.‘In situ’ Raman studies are limited to 2000 K by the visible black-body emission. I designed a high temperature cell to perform UVRRS above this limit. The second part of the manuscript presents Raman spectra of pyrolitic graphite and HOPG up to 2700 K. This data are consistent with anharmonic models up to 900 K, and show the coupling effects of electron-phonon and phonon-phonon. The last one dominates the anharmonicity above 1000 K. The Raman spectra was calibrated as a function of temperature and became a “thermometer” up to 2700 K.For high pressure measurements in the third part, I modified an anvil cell to study by UVRRS, the vibrational changes induced by pressure on very luminescent molecular organic crystals. I present an analysis at 244 nm of resonant Raman modes of perylene crystal under hydrostatic pressure up to 0.8 GPa. Some of them have a non linear feature under pressure, revealing structural and planar modifications of the molecules.
15

Investigations of Structure-Property Relationships in NPI and BODIPY Based Luminescent Material

Mukherjee, Sanjoy January 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Luminescent materials find numerous applications in recent times and have enriched human lives in several different ways. From display and lighting technologies to security, sensing and biological investigations, luminescent organic compounds have become indispensible and often preferred over their inorganic counterparts. The versatility of organic materials arises from their comparative low costs, ease of fine-tuning, low toxicity and the possibility to develop flexible devices. Even until very recent times, the investigations and usage of organic luminescent materials were mostly limited to solution-state properties. However, with progress of available characterisation techniques and parallel development of their usage in solid-state devices and other applications (e.g. security, forensics, sensing etc.), significantly greater attention has been paid to the development and investigations of solid-state emissive organic materials. In solid-state applications, apart from the molecular properties of any given material, their cumulative i.e. bulk physical properties are of even greater importance. Thus, investigations of structure-property relationships in organic luminescent compounds to understand their molecular and bulk properties are of fundamental interest. In this thesis, NPI (1,8-naphthalimide) and BODIPY (boron-dipyrromethene) dyes were investigated to provide a broad overview of their structure-property correlations. Among commonly encountered organic luminescent materials, NPIs and BODIPYs have emerged as two broad classes of luminescent organic compounds, finding applications as functional luminescent materials in various fields. However, lack of understanding for controlling the cumulative emissive properties of these compounds has limited their usage as active solid-state emitters in various applications. This thesis presents several new insights into the molecular and bulk emissive properties of these two classes of luminescent dyes (NPIs and BODIPYs). The contents of the six chapters contained in this thesis are summarised below. Chapter 1 summarises the available understanding of the basic concepts of photoluminescence and the design strategies to develop solid-state luminescent and AIE (aggregation-induced emission) active materials. This chapter also emphasises in the basic nature of the NPI and BODIPY compounds, their substitution patterns and their inherent characteristics and touches upon the relatively unexplored properties of NPI and BODIPY based materials. The importance and scope of the work reported in the thesis is outlined at the end of the chapter. Chapter 2 describes a detailed investigation of a series of seven (4-oxoaryl substituted) NPI compounds (1-7) providing an insight into the molecular and cumulative photophysical behaviour of these compounds. The low ICT characteristics of the NPIs, coupled with the twisted geometry, facilitated solid-state luminescence in these materials. The solution and solid-state luminescent properties of these compounds can be directly correlated to their structural rigidity, nature of substituents and solid-state intermolecular interactions (e.g. π-π stacking, C-H•••O interactions etc.). The solid-state crystal structures of the NPI siblings are profoundly affected by the pendant substituents. All of the NPIs (1-7) show antiparallel dimeric π-π stacking interactions in the solid-state which can further extend in parallel, alternate, orthogonal or lateral fashion depending on the steric and electronic nature of the C-4′ substituents. Structural investigations including Hirsfeld surface analysis methods reveal that while strongly interacting systems show weak to moderate emission in their condensed states, weakly interacting systems show strong emission yields under the same conditions. The nature of packing and extended structures also affects the emission colors of the NPIs in the solid-state. DFT computational studies were utilized to understand the molecular and cumulative electronic behavior of the NPIs. Apart from the investigation of solid-state luminescence, other functional potentials of these NPIs were also explored. One of the compounds (i.e. 4) shows chemodosimetric response towards aqueous Hg(II) species with a ‘turn-on’ response. Also, depending on the molecular flexibility of the compounds, promising AIEE (aggregation-induced emission enhancement) features were observed in these NPIs. Later (in Chapter 3), we developed a systematic investigation in a series of purely organic NPIs, restricting various parameters, to attain a thorough understanding of such AIEE properties. Chapter 3 describes a detailed experimental and computational study in order gain an insight into the AIE (aggregation-induced emission) and AIEE mechanisms in NPI compounds. Systematic structural perturbation was used to fine tune the luminescence properties of three new 1,8-naphthalimides (8-10) in solution and as aggregates. The NPIs (8-10) show blue emission in solution state and the fluorescence quantum yields depend on their molecular rigidity. In concentrated solutions of the NPIs, intermolecular interactions were found to result in quenching of fluorescence. In contrast, upon aggregation (in THF:H2O mixtures), two of the NPIs show aggregation-induced-emission-enhancement (AIEE). The NPIs also show moderately high solid-state emission quantum yields (~10-12.7 %). The AIEE behaviors of the NPIs depend on their molecular rigidity and nature of intermolecular interactions. The NPIs (8-10) show different extents of intermolecular (π-π and C-H•••O) interactions in their solid-state structures depending on their substituents. Detailed photophysical, computational and structural investigations suggest that only an optimal balance of structural flexibility and intermolecular communication is the effective recipe for achieving AIEE characteristics in these NPIs. Chapter 4 presents the design, synthesis and detailed investigations and potential applications of a series of NPI-BODIPY dyads (11-13). The NPI and BODIPY moieties in these dyads are electronically separated by oxoaryl bridges and the compounds only differ structurally with respect to methyl substitutions on the BODIPY fluorophore. The NPI and BODIPY moieties retain their optical features in these molecular dyads (11- 13). Dyads 11-13 show dual emission in solution state originating from the two separate fluorescent units. The variations of the dual emission in these compounds are controlled by the structural flexibility of the systems. The dyads also show significant AIES (Aggregation-Induced-Emission Switching) features upon formation of nano-aggregates in THF-H2O mixtures with visual changes in emission from green to red color. Whereas the flexible and aggregation prone system (i.e. compound 11) shows aggregation-induced enhancement of emission, rigid systems with less favorable intermolecular interactions (i.e. compound 12-13) show aggregation-induced quenching of emission. The emission-intensity vs. the structural-flexibility correlations were found to be reverse in solution and aggregated states. Photophysical and structural investigations suggest that the intermolecular interactions (e.g. π-π stacking etc.) play major role in controlling emission of these compounds in aggregated states. Similar trends were also observed in the solid-state luminescence of these compounds. The applications of the luminescent dyads 11-13 as live-cell imaging dyes was also investigated. Chapter 5 describes investigations of photophysical properties of a series of six BODIPY dyes (14-19) in which there is a systematic alteration of a common -C6H4Si(CH3)3 substituent. Inrelated constitutional isomers, the systematic increment of steric congestion and lowering of molecular symmetry around the BODIPY core result in a steady increment of solution and solid- state fluorescence quantum yields. The increasing fluorescence quantum yields (solution, solid state) with increasing steric congestions show that the molecular free rotation and aggregation-induced fluorescence quenching of BODIPYs can be successfully suppressed by lowering the flexibility of the molecules. Photophysical and DFT investigations reveal that the electronic band gap in any set of these constitutional isomers remain almost similar. However, the crystal structures of the compounds reveal that the solid-state colour and quantum yields of the compounds in solid-state are also related to the nature of intermolecular interactions. Chapter 6 demonstrates the use of DFT computational methods to understand the effect of alkyl groups in governing the basic structural and electronic aspects of BODIPY dyes. As demonstrated in Chapter 4 and Chapter 5, apparently electronically inactive alkyl groups can be of immense importance to control the overall photophysics of BODIPYs. In this context, a systematic strategy su was utilized considering all possible outcomes of constitutionally-isomeric molecules to understand the effects of alkyl groups on the BODIPY molecules. Four different computational methods were employed to ascertain the unanimity of the observed trends associated with the molecular properties. In line with experimental observations, it was found that alkyl substituents in BODIPY dyes situated at 3/5-positions effectively participate in stabilization as well as planarization of such molecules. Screening of all the possible isomeric molecular systems was used to understand the individual properties and overall effects of the typical alkyl substituents in controlling several basic properties of such BODIPY molecules.
16

Growth and Physical Properties of Biaxial Nonlinear Optical Crystals of Ascorbic Acid Family

Raghavendra Rao, K January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Saccharides, a class of organic materials, are potential candidates for nonlinear optical applications. Ascorbic acid is a sugar acid and is classified as a monosaccharide. The molecule of ascorbic acid has two chiral centers and, therefore, four stereoisomers. Among them, two are naturally occurring compounds; L-ascorbic acid and D-isoascorbic acid. From these two acids various salts and other derivatives could be synthesized. In this thesis, four compounds of the ascorbic acid family were selected for detailed study based on their nonlinearity, chemical and physical stability and their crystallization characteristics. The thesis is organized into seven chapters. The first chapter covers the theoretical background of nonlinear optics, especially, second harmonic generation. Second chapter details the experimental techniques and methodology adopted. Chapter 3 discusses the crystal structure, growth, physical and nonlinear optical properties of Lithium Disoascorbate monohydrate (LDAM). Detailed analysis of refractive index measurements employing Brewsters angle method and determination of phase matching curves, effective nonlinear coefficient, walk off angle etc are given. In Chapter 4, investigations on Sodium D-isoascorbate monohydrate (NDAM) are presented. Detailed characterization of the crystals including thermal, optical, dielectric properties are carried out. Analyses of dielectric dispersion based on Cole-Cole equation are discussed. Comprehensive studies on laser damage of the crystals are discussed. Chapter 5 discusses the nonlinear optical properties of the monoclinic D-isoascorbic acid (DIA). Chapter 6 presents studies on the triclinic Lithium L-ascorbate dihydrate (LLA) crystals. The crystals exhibit intense non-collinear second harmonic rings as they possesses large birefringence coupled with high second order nonlinear coefficients. The SHG conversion efficiency of these crystals is 15 times that of KDP. In the final chapter, a comprehensive summary of the work carried out is presented along with scope for further investigations.
17

Frenkel and Charge-Transfer Excitons in Quasi-One-Dimensional Molecular Crystals with Strong Intermolecular Orbital Overlap

Hoffmann, Michael 19 December 2000 (has links)
We present a theoretical and experimental study on the lowest electronically excited states in quasi-one-dimensional molecular crystals. The specific calculations and the experiments are performed for the model compounds MePTCDI (N-N'-dimethylperylene-3,4:9,10-dicarboximide) and TCDA(3,4:9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride). The intermolecular interactions between nearest neighbors are quantum chemically analyzed on the basis of semi-empirical (ZINDO/S) Hartree-Fock calculations and a singly excited configuration interaction scheme. Supermolecular dimer states are projected onto a basis set of localized excitations. The nature of the lowest states is then completely explained as a superposition of molecular and low lying charge-transfer excitations. The CT excitations show a significant intrinsic transition dipole, which is oriented approximately parallel to the molecular planes and has a large component along the molecular M-axis. The exciton states in the one-dimensional stacks are described by a model Hamiltonian that includes interactions between three vibronic levels of the lowest molecular excitation and nearest-neighbor CT excitations. The three-dimensional crystal structure is considered by Frenkel exciton transfer between arbitrary molecules. This model is compared to polarized absorption spectra. With a small set of parameters, we can describe the key features of the absorption spectra, the polarization behavior, and the Davydov splitting. The variation of the polarization ratio for the various exciton states is analyzed as a direct qualitative proof for the mixing between Frenkel and charge-transfer excitons.
18

Frenkel and Charge-Transfer Excitons in Quasi-One-Dimensional Molecular Crystals with Strong Intermolecular Orbital Overlap / Frenkel und Charge-Transfer Exzitonen in Quasi-Eindimensionalen Molekülkristallen mit starker intermolekularer Orbitalüberlappung

Hoffmann, Michael 04 December 2000 (has links) (PDF)
We present a theoretical and experimental study on the lowest electronically excited states in quasi-one-dimensional molecular crystals. The specific calculations and the experiments are performed for the model compounds MePTCDI (N-N'-dimethylperylene-3,4:9,10-dicarboximide) and TCDA(3,4:9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride). The intermolecular interactions between nearest neighbors are quantum chemically analyzed on the basis of semi-empirical (ZINDO/S) Hartree-Fock calculations and a singly excited configuration interaction scheme. Supermolecular dimer states are projected onto a basis set of localized excitations. The nature of the lowest states is then completely explained as a superposition of molecular and low lying charge-transfer excitations. The CT excitations show a significant intrinsic transition dipole, which is oriented approximately parallel to the molecular planes and has a large component along the molecular M-axis. The exciton states in the one-dimensional stacks are described by a model Hamiltonian that includes interactions between three vibronic levels of the lowest molecular excitation and nearest-neighbor CT excitations. The three-dimensional crystal structure is considered by Frenkel exciton transfer between arbitrary molecules. This model is compared to polarized absorption spectra. With a small set of parameters, we can describe the key features of the absorption spectra, the polarization behavior, and the Davydov splitting. The variation of the polarization ratio for the various exciton states is analyzed as a direct qualitative proof for the mixing between Frenkel and charge-transfer excitons.

Page generated in 0.3421 seconds