| Literature DB >> 30061571 |
P Shiv Halasyamani1, James M Rondinelli2.
Abstract
Inorganic materials exhibiting second-harmonic generation (SHG) are used to generate coherent radiation at wavelengths where solid-state laser sources are not available; that is, the deep UV (DUV) below 200 nm. Here, we describe the structure and optical property requirements that should be assessed to conclusively demonstrate the discovery of a functional DUV material for nonlinear optical (NLO) applications.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30061571 PMCID: PMC6065356 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-05411-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Deep-UV nonlinear optical materials. Deep-UV spectrum from ∼225 nm to 125 nm depicting the absorption edges of some NLO materials, along with excimer wavelengths F2 and ArF (blue dashed lines), 5th, 6th, and 7th harmonics of Nd:YAG: 1064 nm (green dotted line), and energies at 6, 7, 8, and 9 eV (red dashed lines). The arrows denote the absorption edge for each material, where the numbers in square brackets are the wavelengths where coherent radiation from a fundamental 1064 nm source is reported. The birefringence is given after the compound. See ref. [10] for the birefringence phase-matching condition expressions for uniaxial and biaxial crystals. Beryllium-containing borates exhibit absorption edges below 175 nm (7.08 eV), 147 nm (8.43 eV), and 160 nm (7.75 eV) for KBBF and RBBF respectively, as well as appropriate birefringence values, i.e., 0.080 (at 1064 nm for KBBF) and 0.073 (at 649.3 nm for RBBF) and nonlinear optical d constants, 0.47 pm/V (KBBF) and 0.45 pm/V (RBBF). Adapted from ref. [15]
Fig. 2NLO Materials inspection. a The experiment (e) and simulation (s) must-have and like-to-have checklist itemizes important measurements and analyses to perform on a candidate compound; wherever feasible, both types of assessments should be performed. b Discovery workflow highlighting the main property assessments required to determine functionality—commercial viability—of new laboratory discovered or computationally predicted DUV NLO materials. Computational researchers can then facilitate the experimental laboratory discovery (hexagonal link) by providing confidence estimates to the prediction. c For materials predictions without experimental data, the quality of the results should be addressed by considering how different levels of theory, e.g., exchange-correlation functionals to DFT (upper panel), impact the predicted optical properties and phase stabilities (formation energies) of the crystal. Effect of the numerical accuracies of the plane-wave expansion, k-point sampling of the irreducible Brillouin zone (IBZ) and number of unoccupied bands, on the linear optical properties from DFT-PBEsol calculations for the experimental KBe2BO3F2 (KBBF) structure