Journal Article10.1103/PHYSREVB.39.3337
Nonlinear refractive index of optical crystals.
636
TL;DR: The measured halide ion hyperpolarizabilities for several alkali-halide crystals are in reasonable agreement with recent self-consistent calculations.
read more
Abstract: The nonlinear refractive indices (${n}_{2}$) of a large number of optical crystals have been measured at a wavelength near one micrometer with use of nearly degenerate three-wave mixing. The measurements are compared with the predictions of an empirical formula derived by Boling, Glass, and Owyoung. This formula, which relates ${n}_{2}$ to the linear refractive index and its dispersion, is shown to be accurate to within about 30% for materials with nonlinear indices ranging over 3 orders of magnitude. Measurements for a number of binary oxide and fluoride crystals have been analyzed under the assumption that the hyperpolarizability of the anion is much larger than that of the cation. It is found that the hyperpolarizability of oxygen varies by a factor of 10, and that of fluorine varies by a factor of 7, depending on the size of the coordinating cation. This behavior is similar to that of the linear polarizability, although the hyperpolarizability is much more sensitive than the linear polarizability to the identity of the cation. The measured halide ion hyperpolarizabilities for several alkali-halide crystals are in reasonable agreement with recent self-consistent calculations. A semiempirical model was proposed by Wilson and Curtis to account for the dependence of the linear anionic polarizability on the radius of the cation. This model also accounts quite well for the variation of the hyperpolarizability of both fluorine and oxygen, except for cation partners that have filled or unfilled d-electron shells. The nonlinear indices of a number of complex oxides (i.e., those with more than one cation) have been calculated from the partial hyperpolarizabilities deduced from the data for the binary oxides. The calculated and measured values of ${n}_{2}$ agree to within an average error of 13%.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Sensitive measurement of optical nonlinearities using a single beam
TL;DR: In this paper, a single-beam technique for measuring both the nonlinear refractive index and nonlinear absorption coefficient for a wide variety of materials is reported, including a comprehensive theoretical analysis.
•Journal Article
Sensitive measurement of optical nonlinearities using a single beam
TL;DR: In this paper, a single-beam technique for measuring both the nonlinear refractive index and nonlinear absorption coefficient for a wide variety of materials is reported, including a comprehensive theoretical analysis.
5K
•Book
Handbook of Optical Materials
Marvin J. Weber
- 24 Sep 2002
Abstract: CRYSTALLINE MATERIALS Introduction Physical Properties Optical Properties Mechanical Properties Thermal Properties Magnetooptic Properties Electrooptic Properties Elastooptic Properties Nonlinear Optical Properties GLASSES Introduction Commercial Optical Glasses Specialty Optical Glasses Fused Silica Fluoride Glasses Chalcogenide Glasses Magnetooptic Properties Electrooptic Properties Elastooptic Properties Nonlinear Optical Properties Special Glasses POLYMERIC MATERIALS Optical Plastics Index of Refraction Nonlinear Optical Properties Thermal Properties Engineering Data METALS Physical Properties of Selected Metals Optical Properties Mechanical Properties Thermal Properties Mirror Substrate Materials LIQUIDS Introduction Water Physical Properties of Selected Liquids Index of Refraction Nonlinear Optical Properties Magnetooptic Properties Commercial Optical Liquids GASES Introduction Physical Properties of Selected Gases Index of Refraction Nonlinear Optical Properties Magnetooptic Properties Atomic Resonance Filters APPENDICES Safe Handling of Optical Materials Abbreviations, Acronyms, and Mineralogical or Common Names for Optical Materials Abbreviations for Methods of Preparing Optical Materials and Thin Films Fundamental Physical Constants Units and Conversion Factors
Dispersion of bound electron nonlinear refraction in solids
TL;DR: In this article, a two-hand model is used to calculate the scaling and spectrum of the nonlinear absorption of semiconductors and wide-gap optical solids, and the bound electronic nonlinear refractive index n/sub 2/ is obtained using a Kramers-Kronig transformation.
1K
Electronic oxide polarizability and optical basicity of simple oxides. I
Vesselin Dimitrov,Sumio Sakka +1 more
TL;DR: The average electronic oxide polarizability α02− of numerous single component oxides has been calculated on the basis of two different properties: linear refractive index n0 and energy gap Eg, which have demonstrated remarkable correlation.
1K
References
Nonlinear refractive-index measurements of glasses using three-wave frequency mixing
TL;DR: In this article, the nonlinear refractive index of transparent materials is measured relative to that of a standard with a known index, and the relationship between the observed nonlinear index and the structure and composition of the glasses is discussed.
293
Nonlinear Refractive Index of Glasses and Crystals
M. J. Weber,D. Milam,W. L. Smith +2 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed discussion of the origin and spatial anisotropy of refractive-index nonlinearities is presented, and methods for measuring the nonlinear refractive index coefficient are reviewed.
267
Dielectric-breakdown threshold and nonlinear-refractive-index measurements with picosecond laser pulses
TL;DR: In this paper, single pulses from a well-calibrated mode-locked YAG:Nd laser have been used to study the dielectric-breakdown properties of 14 transparent solids.
153
Feasibility of measuring the nonlinear index of refraction by third-order frequency mixing
TL;DR: In this paper, an original frequency-mixing technique is described which conveniently measures the third-order optical susceptibility of any transparent material, and the results are presented for χ1111(3), ω1, ω 1, and ω 2 in a number of materials.
150
Polarizability of ions in crystals
TL;DR: Ionic polarizabilities for alkali, halide, and chalcogenide ions in crystals with the NaCl structure were calculated using the Sternheimer method in this paper, where the crystalline environment about the central ion was taken to be a spherically averaged sum of pseudopotentials.
127