| Literature DB >> 28959029 |
Yong Sing You1, Yanchun Yin2,3, Yi Wu2,3, Andrew Chew2,3, Xiaoming Ren2,3, Fengjiang Zhuang2,3, Shima Gholam-Mirzaei3, Michael Chini3, Zenghu Chang2,3, Shambhu Ghimire4.
Abstract
High-harmonic generation in isolated atoms and molecules has been widely utilized in extreme ultraviolet photonics and attosecond pulse metrology. Recently, high-harmonic generation has been observed in solids, which could lead to important applications such as all-optical methods to image valance charge density and reconstruct electronic band structures, as well as compact extreme ultraviolet light sources. So far these studies are confined to crystalline solids; therefore, decoupling the respective roles of long-range periodicity and high density has been challenging. Here we report the observation of high-harmonic generation from amorphous fused silica. We decouple the role of long-range periodicity by comparing harmonics generated from fused silica and crystalline quartz, which contain the same atomic constituents but differ in long-range periodicity. Our results advance current understanding of the strong-field processes leading to high-harmonic generation in solids with implications for the development of robust and compact extreme ultraviolet light sources.Although higher harmonic generation from solids has become of interest in many fields, its observation is typically limited to crystalline solids. Here, the authors demonstrate that higher harmonics can be generated from amorphous solids.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28959029 PMCID: PMC5620047 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00989-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Measured high-harmonic spectra of fused silica and crystalline quartz. High-order harmonics are produced by focusing intense two-cycle laser pulses onto ~100 μm thick samples of fused silica and crystalline quartz. The central wavelength of the laser is ~1700 nm (0.73 eV). A portion of the spectrum is measured, which shows that the high-energy end extends to ~25 eV. Both samples withstand repetitive excitation with the maximum peak field of ~2 VÅ−1. The resulting harmonics spectra from fused silica and crystalline quartz are shown in a, b, respectively. The spectrum from fused silica consists of discrete harmonic peaks separated by twice the photon energy while the exact location of peaks depends on the carrier-envelope phase setting. The spectrum from crystalline quartz shows peaks that separate by one photon energy and merge with each other due to broad spectrum. The efficiency from crystalline quartz is higher than from fused silica. It also consists of a minimum in the range from 17–18 eV
Fig. 2Dependence of high-harmonic spectrum with the laser peak field. Dependence of high-harmonic spectrum with the peak field of the driving laser for a fused silica and b crystalline quartz. For crystalline quartz, the spectral minimum seen around 17 eV persists for different peak fields. c is the comparison of fused silica and quartz for their total yield (from ~14 to ~25 eV) with different peak fields. At modest fields the total yield is similar, but the intensity scaling is significantly different and eventually crystalline quartz becomes more efficient
Fig. 3Dependence of high-harmonic spectrum with carrier-envelope phase of few-cycle pulse. Experimental data for carrier-envelope-phase (CEP) dependence of high-harmonic spectrum from a fused silica and b crystalline quartz at a peak laser field of 2 VÅ−1. The dotted black lines trace the change in photon energy of harmonic peaks with CEP. The amplitude of CEP slope is ~3 eVπ−1. The spectrum of fused silica repeats every π (horizontal axis) while there is a dominant 2π periodicity for crystalline quartz. The spectral minimum of crystalline quartz persists for all CEP settings. We note that the CEP values in the experiments are relative. c, d show the calculated high-harmonic spectrum from a quantum mechanical simulation of multi-level models. The insets show the respective energy levels and the couplings used in the simulations. The simulation results reproduce the periodicity and CEP slope of the experimental results