| Literature DB >> 35324629 |
Andrey V Belashov1, Igor A Shevkunov2, Ekaterina P Kolesova3, Anna O Orlova3, Sergei E Putilin3, Andrei V Veniaminov3, Chau-Jern Cheng4, Nikolay V Petrov3.
Abstract
We report on the application of time-resolved inline digital holography in the study of the nonlinear optical properties of quantum dots deposited onto sample glass. The Fresnel diffraction patterns of the probe pulse due to noncollinear degenerate phase modulation induced by a femtosecond pump pulse were extracted from the set of inline digital holograms and analyzed. The absolute values of the nonlinear refractive index of both the sample glass substrate and the deposited layer of quantum dots were evaluated using the proposed technique. To characterize the inhomogeneous distribution of the samples' nonlinear optical properties, we proposed plotting an optical nonlinearity map calculated as a local standard deviation of the diffraction pattern intensities induced by noncollinear degenerate phase modulation.Entities:
Keywords: diffraction patterns; femtosecond pulses; inline digital holograms; noncollinear degenerate phase modulation; nonlinear refractive index; pump probe digital holography; quantum dots
Year: 2022 PMID: 35324629 PMCID: PMC8955446 DOI: 10.3390/jimaging8030074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Imaging ISSN: 2313-433X
Figure 1(a) A scheme of the experimental setup for the recording of inline digital hologram data set in the TRIDH experiment. (b) A scheme of two femtosecond laser pulse propagation inside the sample and probe pulse NDPM-induced phase shift in the XZ plane. Pulses propagation is from the left to right according to the red and purple arrows. The location of both femtosecond pulses in three time moments are denoted with solid, dash, and dotted lines. The plot on the right indicates the amount of phase shift induced in the probe pulse at each point of the X-axis. The gray semitransparent area indicates the pulse intersection area, and the blue and orange indicate the glass substrate and deposited QDs.
Figure 2Examples of initial inline digital holograms before (top row) and after (bottom row) image filtration. The plot on the right side demonstrates the experimental profile and its fitting using numerically simulated data.
Figure 3Examples of (a) an inline digital holograms recorded at the delay time , (b) a “basic” diffraction pattern as observed without pump pulse, and (c) the diffraction pattern of the probe pulse induced by its NDPM on the pump pulse in the area of their intersection inside the sample (purple arrows indicate the area of two pulses intersection). Notice the different legend ranges in the figures. (d) Examples of grayscale level histograms within the three areas of the diffraction patterns of (i) QDs deposited on the glass substrate, (ii) the pure sample glass only, and (iii) no intersection between pump and pulses inside the sample. Standard deviations of the histograms and diffraction pattern modulation amplitude are indicated for the three areas.
Figure 4The top row demonstrates diffraction patterns induced by the femtosecond probe pulse NDPM. The bottom row shows several typical nonlinearity “maps” obtained for different pump pulse delay values. The final nonlinearity “map”, estimated from their combined analysis, is shown in the right part of the figure.