Paper
1 April 1992 Multifunctional materials: new mechanisms for NLO effects
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Proceedings Volume 1626, Nonlinear Optics III; (1992) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.58117
Event: OE/LASE '92, 1992, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Abstract
Multifunctional properties of nonlinear optical chromophores are discussed both in terms of a given chromophore exhibiting more than one type or mechanism of optical nonlinearity and in terms of a chromophore exhibiting useful auxiliary properties. For materials exhibiting more than one type of mechanism of optical nonlinearity, the concept of pulse-controlled optical nonlinearity is introduced and discussed. An analogy is drawn to multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance studies which are useful in systematically elucidating excited state dynamics. Practically, pulsed control of optical nonlinearity provides a means of enhancing and modulating nonlinear optical phenomena. The photochemical reactivity of nonlinear optical chromophores is discussed in terms of fabricating ordered lattices appropriate for the development of integrated circuits and the realization of specific effects such as quasi-phase matching in second harmonic generation.
© (1992) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Linda S. Sapochak, Malcolm R. McLean, Mai Chen, Larry Raymond Dalton, and Luping Yu "Multifunctional materials: new mechanisms for NLO effects", Proc. SPIE 1626, Nonlinear Optics III, (1 April 1992); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.58117
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KEYWORDS
Nonlinear optics

Polymers

Chromophores

Multifunctional materials

Optical lithography

Harmonic generation

Magnetism

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