Second-order Material Characterization

From CleanEnergyWIKI
Revision as of 14:48, 18 August 2009 by Cmditradmin (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Previous Topic Return to Second-order Processes, Materials & Characterization Menu Next Topic

Characterization

β, the first nonlinear polarizability depends on molecular structure, environment and measurement frequency. There are several tools that help us characterize the materials.

Hyper Rayleigh Scattering (HRS)

Hyper Rayleigh Scattering (aka Harmonic Light Scattering) is one method for measuring β.

The Hyper Rayleigh Scattering - Test best schematic

An incident laser generates a second harmonic signal, specifically the frequency double signal. This can be related to the beta of the sample using this formula:

<math>\frac {I_{sample}} {I_{solvent}} = \frac {N_{sample} \langle \beta^2 _{sample} \rangle + N_{solvent} \langle \beta^2_{solvent}\rangle} {N_{solvent} \langle \beta^2_{solvent}\rangle}\,\!</math>
HRS spectrum for 1.5 μm TCP1 in CHCl3

See Firestone 2004 [1].


See also Density Functional Theory



Previous Topic Return to Second-order Processes, Materials & Characterization Menu Next Topic
  1. K. A. Firestone, P. Reid, R. Lawson, S. H. Jang, and L. R. Dalton, “Advances in Organic Electro-Optic Materials and Processing,” Inorg. Chem. Acta, 357, 3957-66 (2004)