Publication | Open Access
Wide‐Bandgap Organic Crystals: Enhanced Optical‐to‐Terahertz Nonlinear Frequency Conversion at Near‐Infrared Pumping
23
Citations
87
References
2020
Year
Thz PhotonicsOptical MaterialsTerahertz TechnologyEngineeringNonlinear OpticsChemistryRefractive Index EngineeringTerahertz PhotonicsTerahertz PhysicsOptical PropertiesAbstract Enhanced TerahertzMaterials SciencePhotonicsTerahertz SpectroscopyNon-linear OpticWide‐bandgap Organic CrystalsTerahertz ScienceNonlinear CrystalsWide BandgapTerahertz DevicesApplied PhysicsTerahertz TechniqueCrystalsOptoelectronicsTerahertz Applications
Abstract Enhanced terahertz (THz) wave generation is demonstrated in nonlinear organic crystals through refractive index engineering, which improves phase matching characteristics substantially. Unlike conventional low‐bandgap nonlinear organic crystals, the newly designed benzimidazolium‐based HMI (2‐(4‐hydroxy‐3‐methoxystyryl)‐1,3‐dimethyl‐1H‐benzoimidazol‐3‐ium) chromophore possesses a relatively wide bandgap. This reduces the optical group index in the near‐infrared, allowing better phase matching with the generated THz waves, and leads to high optical‐to‐THz conversion. A unique feature of the HMI‐based crystals, compared to conventional wide‐bandgap aniline‐based crystals, is their remarkably larger macroscopic optical nonlinearity, a one order of magnitude higher diagonal component in macroscopic nonlinear susceptibility than NPP ((1‐(4‐nitrophenyl)pyrrolidin‐2‐yl)methanol) crystals. The HMI‐based crystals also exhibit much higher thermal stability, with a melting temperature T m above 250 °C, versus aniline‐based crystals (116 °C for NPP). With pumping at the technologically important wavelength of 800 nm, the proposed HMI‐based crystals boost high optical‐to‐THz conversion efficiency, comparable to benchmark low‐bandgap quinolinium crystals with state‐of‐the‐art macroscopic nonlinearity. This performance is due to the excellent phase matching enabled by decreasing optical group indices in the near‐infrared through wide‐bandgap chromophores. The proposed wide‐bandgap design is a promising way to control the refractive index of various nonlinear organic materials for enhanced frequency conversion processes.
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