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Second-harmonic generation

Second-harmonic generation (SHG), also known as frequency doubling, is the lowest-order wave-wave nonlinear interaction that occurs in various systems, including optical, radio, atmospheric, and magnetohydrodynamic systems.[1] As a prototype behavior of waves, SHG is widely used, for example, in doubling laser frequencies. SHG was initially discovered as a nonlinear optical process[2] in which two photons with the same frequency interact with a nonlinear material, are "combined", and generate a new photon with twice the energy of the initial photons (equivalently, twice the frequency and half the wavelength), that conserves the coherence of the excitation. It is a special case of sum-frequency generation (2 photons), and more generally of harmonic generation.

Energy level scheme of SHG process

The second-order nonlinear susceptibility of a medium characterizes its tendency to cause SHG. Second-harmonic generation, like other even-order nonlinear optical phenomena, is not allowed in media with inversion symmetry (in the leading electric dipole contribution).[3] However, effects such as the Bloch–Siegert shift (oscillation), found when two-level systems are driven at Rabi frequencies comparable to their transition frequencies, will give rise to second-harmonic generation in centro-symmetric systems.[4][5] In addition, in non-centrosymmetric crystals belonging to crystallographic point group 432, SHG is not possible [6] and under Kleinman's conditions SHG in 422 and 622 point groups should vanish,[7] although some exceptions exist.[8]

In some cases, almost 100% of the light energy can be converted to the second-harmonic frequency. These cases typically involve intense pulsed laser beams passing through large crystals and careful alignment to obtain phase matching. In other cases, like second-harmonic imaging microscopy, only a tiny fraction of the light energy is converted to the second harmonic, but this light can nevertheless be detected with the help of optical filters.

Generating the second harmonic, often called frequency doubling, is also a process in radio communication; it was developed early in the 20th century and has been used with frequencies in the megahertz range. It is a special case of frequency multiplication.

History edit

 
An electron (purple) is being pushed side-to-side by a sinusoidally oscillating force, i.e. the light's electric field. But because the electron is in an anharmonic potential energy environment (black curve), the electron motion is not sinusoidal. The three arrows show the Fourier series of the motion: The blue arrow corresponds to ordinary (linear) susceptibility, the green arrow corresponds to second-harmonic generation, and the red arrow corresponds to optical rectification.

Second-harmonic generation was first demonstrated by Peter Franken, A. E. Hill, C. W. Peters, and G. Weinreich at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1961.[9] The demonstration was made possible by the invention of the laser, which created the required high-intensity coherent light. They focused a ruby laser with a wavelength of 694 nm into a quartz sample. They sent the output light through a spectrometer, recording the spectrum on photographic paper, which indicated the production of light at 347 nm. Famously, when published in the journal Physical Review Letters,[9] the copy editor mistook the dim spot (at 347 nm) on the photographic paper as a speck of dirt and removed it from the publication.[10] The formulation of SHG was initially described by N. Bloembergen and P. S. Pershan at Harvard in 1962.[11] In their extensive evaluation of Maxwell's equations at the planar interface between a linear and nonlinear medium, several rules for the interaction of light in non-linear media were elucidated.

Types in crystals edit

Critical phase-matching edit

 
Different types of second-harmonic generation phase-matching of a coherent light for strong conversion. The case of negative crystals ( ) is considered, invert indices if positive crystal ( ).

Second-harmonic generation occurs in three types for critical phase-matching,[12] denoted 0, I and II. In Type 0 SHG two photons having extraordinary polarization with respect to the crystal will combine to form a single photon with double the frequency/energy and extraordinary polarization. In Type I SHG two photons having ordinary polarization with respect to the crystal will combine to form one photon with double the frequency and extraordinary polarization. In Type II SHG, two photons having orthogonal polarizations will combine to form one photon with double the frequency and ordinary polarization. For a given crystal orientation, only one of these types of SHG occurs. In general to utilise Type 0 interactions a quasi-phase-matching crystal type will be required, for example periodically poled lithium niobate (PPLN).

Non-critical phase-matching edit

Since phase-matching process basically means to adapt the optical indices n at ω and 2ω, it can also be done by a temperature control in some birefringent crystals, because n changes with the temperature. For instance, LBO presents a perfect phase-matching at 25 °C for a SHG excited at 1200 or 1400 nm,[13] but needs to be elevated at 200 °C for SHG with the usual laser line of 1064 nm. It is called "non-critical" because it does not depend on the crystal orientation as usual phase-matching.

Optical second-harmonic generation edit

 
Diagram of the second-harmonic generation process

Since media with inversion symmetry are forbidden from generating second-harmonic light via the leading-order electric dipole contribution (unlike third harmonic generation), surfaces and interfaces make interesting subjects for study with SHG. In fact, second-harmonic generation and sum frequency generation discriminate against signals from the bulk, implicitly labeling them as surface specific techniques. In 1982, T. F. Heinz and Y. R. Shen explicitly demonstrated for the first time that SHG could be used as a spectroscopic technique to probe molecular monolayers adsorbed to surfaces.[14] Heinz and Shen adsorbed monolayers of laser dye rhodamine to a planar fused silica surface; the coated surface was then pumped by a nanosecond ultra-fast laser. SH light with characteristic spectra of the adsorbed molecule and its electronic transitions were measured as reflection from the surface and demonstrated a quadratic power dependence on the pump laser power.

In SHG spectroscopy, one focuses on measuring twice the incident frequency 2ω given an incoming electric field   in order to reveal information about a surface. Simply (for a more in-depth derivation see below), the induced second-harmonic dipole per unit volume,  , can be written as

 

where   is known as the nonlinear susceptibility tensor and is a characteristic to the materials at the interface of study.[15] The generated   and corresponding   have been shown to reveal information about the orientation of molecules at a surface/interface, the interfacial analytical chemistry of surfaces, and chemical reactions at interfaces.

From planar surfaces edit

 
A depiction of the second-harmonic generation setup for measuring the orientation of phenol at the air-water interface.

Early experiments in the field demonstrated second-harmonic generation from metal surfaces.[16] Eventually, SHG was used to probe the air-water interface, allowing for detailed information about molecular orientation and ordering at one of the most ubiquitous of surfaces.[17] It can be shown that the specific elements of  :

 

where Ns is the adsorbate density, θ is the angle that the molecular axis z makes with the surface normal Z, and   is the dominating element of the nonlinear polarizability of a molecule at an interface, allow one to determine θ, given laboratory coordinates (x, y, z).[18] Using an interference SHG method to determine these elements of χ(2), the first molecular orientation measurement showed that the hydroxyl group of phenol pointed downwards into the water at the air-water interface (as expected due to the potential of hydroxyl groups to form hydrogen bonds). Additionally SHG at planar surfaces has revealed differences in pKa and rotational motions of molecules at interfaces.

From non-planar surfaces edit

 
Cartoon depicting ordered molecules at a small spherical surface. An ultrafast pump laser pumps light with frequency ω which generates light at 2ω from the locally non-centrosymmetric media.

Second-harmonic light can also be generated from surfaces that are ‘locally’ planar, but may have inversion symmetry (centrosymmetric) on a larger scale. Specifically, recent theory has demonstrated that SHG from small spherical particles (micro- and nanometer scale) is allowed by proper treatment of Rayleigh scattering, (scattering without a change in frequency from absorbed to emitted waves).[19] At the surface of a small sphere, inversion symmetry is broken, allowing for SHG and other even order harmonics to occur.

For a colloidal system of microparticles at relatively low concentrations, the total SH signal  , is given by:

 

where   is the SH electric field generated by the jth particle, and n the density of particles.[20] The SH light generated from each particle is coherent, but adds incoherently to the SH light generated by others (as long as density is low enough). Thus, SH light is only generated from the interfaces of the spheres and their environment and is independent of particle-particle interactions. It has also been shown that the second-harmonic electric field   scales with the radius of the particle cubed, a3.

Besides spheres, other small particles like rods have been studied similarly by SHG.[21] Both immobilized and colloidal systems of small particles can be investigated. Recent experiments using second-harmonic generation of non-planar systems include transport kinetics across living cell membranes[22] and demonstrations of SHG in complex nanomaterials.[23]

Radiation pattern edit

 
SHG radiation pattern excited with a Gaussian beam, in a homogeneous medium (A), or at an interface between opposite polarities that is parallel to the propagation (B). Only the forward SHG is represented.

The SHG radiation pattern generated by an exciting Gaussian beam also has a (homogeneous) 2D Gaussian profile if the nonlinear medium being excited is homogeneous (A). However, if the exciting beam is positioned at an interface between opposite polarities (± boundary, B) that is parallel to the beam propagation (see figure), the SHG will be split into two lobes whose amplitudes have opposite sign, i.e. are   phase-shifted. [24]

These boundaries can be found in the sarcomeres of muscles (protein = myosin), for instance. Note that we have considered here only the forward generation.

Moreover the SHG phase-matching can also result in  : some SHG is also emitted in backward (epi direction). When the phase-matching is not fulfilled, as in biological tissues, the backward signal comes from a sufficiently high phase-mismatch which allow a small backward contribution to compensate for it.[25] Unlike fluorescence, the spatial coherence of the process constrain it to emit only in those two directions, but the coherence length in backward is always way smaller than in forward, meaning there is always more forward than backward SHG signal.[26]

 
SHG radiation pattern in forward (F) and backward (B) from different dipoles arangment: (a) single dipoles, thus F = B ; (b) a small stack of dipoles, F > B ; (c) a large stack of dipoles, F >> B ; (d) the Gouy phase-shift cancels the SHGs, F & B weak

The forward (F) to backward (B) ratio is dependent on the arrangement of the different dipoles (green in figure) that are being excited. With only one dipole ((a) in the figure), F = B, but F becomes higher than B when more dipoles are stacked along the propagation direction (b and c). However, the Gouy phase-shift of the Gaussian beam will imply a   phase-shift between the SHGs generated at the edges of the focal volume, and can thus result in destructive interferences (zero signal) if there are dipoles at these edges having the same orientation (case (d) in the figure).

Commercial uses edit

Second-harmonic generation is used by the laser industry to make green 532 nm lasers from a 1064 nm source. The 1064 nm light is fed through a bulk KDP crystal. In high-quality diode lasers the crystal is coated on the output side with an infrared filter to prevent leakage of intense 1064 nm or 808 nm infrared light into the beam. Both of these wavelengths are invisible and do not trigger the defensive "blink-reflex" reaction in the eye and can therefore be a special hazard to the human eyes. Furthermore, some laser safety eyewear intended for argon or other green lasers may filter out the green component (giving a false sense of safety), but transmit the infrared. Nevertheless, some "green laser pointer" products have become available on the market which omit the expensive infrared filter, often without warning.[27] Second-harmonic generation is also used for measuring ultra short pulse width with autocorrelators.

Other applications edit

Ultra-short pulse measurement edit

Characterizing an ultrashort pulse (like measuring its temporal width) cannot be done directly with electronics only, as the time-scale is below 1ps ( sec) : it needs to use the pulse itself, that is why an autocorrelation function is often used. SHG has the advantage of mixing two input fields to generate the harmonic one, it is thus a good candidate (but not the only one) to perform such a pulse measurement. Optical autocorrelation, in its intensity or fringe-resolved (interferometric) version use SHG,[28] unlike field autocorrelation. Also, most versions of the FROG (called SHG-FROG) use SHG to mix the delayed fields.[29]

Second-harmonic generation microscopy edit

In biological and medical science, the effect of second-harmonic generation is used for high-resolution optical microscopy. Because of the non-zero second-harmonic coefficient, only non-centrosymmetric structures are capable of emitting SHG light. One such structure is collagen, which is found in most load-bearing tissues. Using a short-pulse laser such as a femtosecond laser and a set of appropriate filters the excitation light can be easily separated from the emitted, frequency-doubled SHG signal. This allows for very high axial and lateral resolution comparable to that of confocal microscopy without having to use pinholes. SHG microscopy has been used for studies of the cornea[30] and lamina cribrosa sclerae,[31] both of which consist primarily of collagen. Second-harmonic generation can be produced by several non-centrosymmetric organic dyes; however, most of the organic dyes also generate collateral fluorescence along with second-harmonic generation signals.[32] Until now, only two classes of organic dyes have been shown which do not produce any collateral fluorescence and works purely on second-harmonic generation.[32][33] Recently, using two-photon excited fluorescence and second-harmonic generation-based microscopy, a group of Oxford University researchers showed that organic porphyrin-type molecules can have different transition dipole moments for two-photon fluorescence and second-harmonic generation,[34] which are otherwise thought to occur from the same transition dipole moment.[35]

Second-harmonic generation microscopy is also used in material science, for instance to characterize nanostructured materials.[36]

Characterization of crystalline materials edit

Second harmonic generation is also relevant to characterize organic or inorganic crystals[37] since is one of the most discriminant and rapid technique to detect non-centrosymmetry.[38] In addition, this technique can be used on single crystal as well as on powdered samples. One should recall that SHG is only possible (from the bulk) in non-centrosymmetric (NC) crystals. The part of non-centroysmmetric crystals in Nature is much lower than centrosymmetric crystals (circa 22% of the Cambridge structural database[39]), but the frequency of NC crystals increases by a lot in pharmaceutical, biological and electronic fields because of the particular properties of these crystals (piezoelectricity, pyroelectricity, polar phases, chirality,...).

In 1968,[40] (7 years after the first experimental evidence of SHG on single crystal[9]), Kurtz and Perry started to develop a SHG analyzer to rapidly detect the presence or not of inversion center in powdered crystalline samples. The detection of a SHG signal has been shown to be reliable and sensitive test for the detection of crystalline non-centrosymmetry with the confidence level higher than 99%. It is a relevant tool to resolve space group ambiguities that can arise from Friedel’s Law in single-crystal X-ray diffraction.[41] Furthermore, the method is referenced in the International Tables for Crystallography and is described as a “powerful method of testing crystalline materials for the absence of a symmetry center.[42]

One possible application is also to rapidly discriminate chiral phases such as conglomerate that are of particular interest for pharmaceutical industries.[43] It could also be used as a technique to probe the structural purity of material if one of the impurities is NC reaching a detection threshold as low as 1 ppm[44] using Kurtz&Perry apparatus up to one part in 10 billion by volume using a SHG microscope.[45]

Due to the high sensitivity of the technique, it can be a helpful tool in the accurate determination of phase diagram[46] and can also be used to monitor phase transitions(polymorphic transition, dehydration, ...) when at least one of the phases is NC.[47][48][49]

Theoretical derivation (plane wave) edit

At low conversion edit

The simplest case for analysis of second-harmonic generation is a plane wave of amplitude E(ω) traveling in a nonlinear medium in the direction of its k vector. A polarization is generated at the second-harmonic frequency:[50]

 

where   is the effective nonlinear optical coefficient which is dependent on specific components of   that are involved in this particular interaction. The wave equation at 2ω (assuming negligible loss and asserting the slowly varying envelope approximation) is

 

where  .

At low conversion efficiency (E(2ω) ≪ E(ω)) the amplitude   remains essentially constant over the interaction length,  . Then, with the boundary condition   we obtain

 

In terms of the optical intensity,  , this is,

 

This intensity is maximized for the phase-matched condition Δk = 0. If the process is not phase matched, the driving polarization at ω goes in and out of phase with generated wave E(2ω) and conversion oscillates as sin(Δkℓ/2). The coherence length is defined as  . It does not pay to use a nonlinear crystal much longer than the coherence length. (Periodic poling and quasi-phase-matching provide another approach to this problem.)

With depletion edit

 
Diagram of second-harmonic generation with perfect phase matching  .
 
Diagram of second-harmonic generation with an imperfect phase matching  . In this case energy flows forth and back from the pump to the frequency doubled signal, and having a thick crystal can lead to a smaller amount of SHG produced.

When the conversion to 2nd harmonic becomes significant it becomes necessary to include depletion of the fundamental. The energy conversion states that all the involved fields verify the Manley–Rowe relations. One then has the coupled equations:[51]

 

where   denotes the complex conjugate. For simplicity, assume phase matched generation ( ). Then, energy conservation requires that

 

where   is the complex conjugate of the other term, or

 
 
Phase-matched SHG with source depletion (blue), and corresponding excitation (orange). L is the interaction length ( in the text).

Now we solve the equations with the premise

 

and obtain

 

which leads to

 

Using

 

we get

 

If we assume a real  , the relative phases for real harmonic growth must be such that  . Then

 

or

 

where  . From  , it also follows that

 

Theoretical expression with Gaussian beams edit

The excitation wave is assumed to be a Gaussian beam, of amplitude:  

with  ,   the direction of propagation,   the Rayleigh range,   the wave vector.

Each wave verifies the wave equation

 

where  .

With phase-matching edit

It can be shown that:  

(a Gaussian), is a solution of the equation (n = 2 for SHG).

No phase-matching edit

 
Intensity SHG, phase-matched or not. The medium width is supposed to be much higher than z, the Rayleigh range at 20µm, excitation wavelength of 0.8µm, and optical index of 2.2.

A non-perfect phase-matching is a more realistic condition in practice, especially in biological samples. The paraxial approximation is however supposed still valid:  , and in the harmonic expression,   is now  .

In the special case of SHG (n = 2), in a medium of length L and a focus position  , the intensity writes:[52]

 

where   is the speed of light in vacuum,   the vacuum permittivity,   the optical index of the medium at   and   the waist size of excitation.

Thus, the SHG intensity quickly decays in the bulk ( ), due to the Gouy phase-shift of the Gaussian beam.

In conformity with experiments, the SHG signal vanishes in the bulk (if the medium thickness is too large), and the SHG must be generated at the surface of the material: the conversion therefore does not strictly scales with the square of the number of scatterers, contrary to what the plane wave model indicates. Interestingly, the signal also vanishes in bulk for higher orders, like THG.

Materials used for second-harmonic generation edit

Materials capable of generating a second harmonic are crystals without inversion symmetry. This eliminates water, cubic-symmetry crystals and glass.[50]

Here are some crystals used with certain types of laser for SHG conversion:

Notably, filamentous biological proteins with a cylindrical symmetric such as collagen, tubulin or myosin, but also certain carbohydrates (such as starch or cellulose) are also quite good converters of SHG (fundamental in the near infrared).[59]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

Articles edit

  • Parameswaran, K. R.; Kurz, J. R.; Roussev, M. M.; Fejer (2002). "Observation of 99% pump depletion in single-pass second-harmonic generation in a periodically poled lithium niobate waveguide". Optics Letters. 27 (1): 43–45. Bibcode:2002OptL...27...43P. doi:10.1364/ol.27.000043. PMID 18007710.
  • "Frequency doubling". Encyclopedia of laser physics and technology. Retrieved 2006-11-04.

second, harmonic, generation, confused, with, photon, absorption, also, known, frequency, doubling, lowest, order, wave, wave, nonlinear, interaction, that, occurs, various, systems, including, optical, radio, atmospheric, magnetohydrodynamic, systems, prototy. Not to be confused with two photon absorption Second harmonic generation SHG also known as frequency doubling is the lowest order wave wave nonlinear interaction that occurs in various systems including optical radio atmospheric and magnetohydrodynamic systems 1 As a prototype behavior of waves SHG is widely used for example in doubling laser frequencies SHG was initially discovered as a nonlinear optical process 2 in which two photons with the same frequency interact with a nonlinear material are combined and generate a new photon with twice the energy of the initial photons equivalently twice the frequency and half the wavelength that conserves the coherence of the excitation It is a special case of sum frequency generation 2 photons and more generally of harmonic generation Energy level scheme of SHG processThe second order nonlinear susceptibility of a medium characterizes its tendency to cause SHG Second harmonic generation like other even order nonlinear optical phenomena is not allowed in media with inversion symmetry in the leading electric dipole contribution 3 However effects such as the Bloch Siegert shift oscillation found when two level systems are driven at Rabi frequencies comparable to their transition frequencies will give rise to second harmonic generation in centro symmetric systems 4 5 In addition in non centrosymmetric crystals belonging to crystallographic point group 432 SHG is not possible 6 and under Kleinman s conditions SHG in 422 and 622 point groups should vanish 7 although some exceptions exist 8 In some cases almost 100 of the light energy can be converted to the second harmonic frequency These cases typically involve intense pulsed laser beams passing through large crystals and careful alignment to obtain phase matching In other cases like second harmonic imaging microscopy only a tiny fraction of the light energy is converted to the second harmonic but this light can nevertheless be detected with the help of optical filters Generating the second harmonic often called frequency doubling is also a process in radio communication it was developed early in the 20th century and has been used with frequencies in the megahertz range It is a special case of frequency multiplication Contents 1 History 2 Types in crystals 2 1 Critical phase matching 2 2 Non critical phase matching 3 Optical second harmonic generation 3 1 From planar surfaces 3 2 From non planar surfaces 4 Radiation pattern 5 Commercial uses 6 Other applications 6 1 Ultra short pulse measurement 6 2 Second harmonic generation microscopy 6 3 Characterization of crystalline materials 7 Theoretical derivation plane wave 7 1 At low conversion 7 2 With depletion 8 Theoretical expression with Gaussian beams 8 1 With phase matching 8 2 No phase matching 9 Materials used for second harmonic generation 10 See also 11 References 12 External links 12 1 ArticlesHistory edit nbsp An electron purple is being pushed side to side by a sinusoidally oscillating force i e the light s electric field But because the electron is in an anharmonic potential energy environment black curve the electron motion is not sinusoidal The three arrows show the Fourier series of the motion The blue arrow corresponds to ordinary linear susceptibility the green arrow corresponds to second harmonic generation and the red arrow corresponds to optical rectification Second harmonic generation was first demonstrated by Peter Franken A E Hill C W Peters and G Weinreich at the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in 1961 9 The demonstration was made possible by the invention of the laser which created the required high intensity coherent light They focused a ruby laser with a wavelength of 694 nm into a quartz sample They sent the output light through a spectrometer recording the spectrum on photographic paper which indicated the production of light at 347 nm Famously when published in the journal Physical Review Letters 9 the copy editor mistook the dim spot at 347 nm on the photographic paper as a speck of dirt and removed it from the publication 10 The formulation of SHG was initially described by N Bloembergen and P S Pershan at Harvard in 1962 11 In their extensive evaluation of Maxwell s equations at the planar interface between a linear and nonlinear medium several rules for the interaction of light in non linear media were elucidated Types in crystals editCritical phase matching edit nbsp Different types of second harmonic generation phase matching of a coherent light for strong conversion The case of negative crystals n o gt n e displaystyle n o gt n e nbsp is considered invert indices if positive crystal n e gt n o displaystyle n e gt n o nbsp Second harmonic generation occurs in three types for critical phase matching 12 denoted 0 I and II In Type 0 SHG two photons having extraordinary polarization with respect to the crystal will combine to form a single photon with double the frequency energy and extraordinary polarization In Type I SHG two photons having ordinary polarization with respect to the crystal will combine to form one photon with double the frequency and extraordinary polarization In Type II SHG two photons having orthogonal polarizations will combine to form one photon with double the frequency and ordinary polarization For a given crystal orientation only one of these types of SHG occurs In general to utilise Type 0 interactions a quasi phase matching crystal type will be required for example periodically poled lithium niobate PPLN Non critical phase matching edit Since phase matching process basically means to adapt the optical indices n at w and 2w it can also be done by a temperature control in some birefringent crystals because n changes with the temperature For instance LBO presents a perfect phase matching at 25 C for a SHG excited at 1200 or 1400 nm 13 but needs to be elevated at 200 C for SHG with the usual laser line of 1064 nm It is called non critical because it does not depend on the crystal orientation as usual phase matching Optical second harmonic generation edit nbsp Diagram of the second harmonic generation processSince media with inversion symmetry are forbidden from generating second harmonic light via the leading order electric dipole contribution unlike third harmonic generation surfaces and interfaces make interesting subjects for study with SHG In fact second harmonic generation and sum frequency generation discriminate against signals from the bulk implicitly labeling them as surface specific techniques In 1982 T F Heinz and Y R Shen explicitly demonstrated for the first time that SHG could be used as a spectroscopic technique to probe molecular monolayers adsorbed to surfaces 14 Heinz and Shen adsorbed monolayers of laser dye rhodamine to a planar fused silica surface the coated surface was then pumped by a nanosecond ultra fast laser SH light with characteristic spectra of the adsorbed molecule and its electronic transitions were measured as reflection from the surface and demonstrated a quadratic power dependence on the pump laser power In SHG spectroscopy one focuses on measuring twice the incident frequency 2w given an incoming electric field E w displaystyle E omega nbsp in order to reveal information about a surface Simply for a more in depth derivation see below the induced second harmonic dipole per unit volume P 2 2 w displaystyle P 2 2 omega nbsp can be written as E 2 w P 2 2 w x 2 E w E w displaystyle E 2 omega propto P 2 2 omega chi 2 E omega E omega nbsp where x 2 displaystyle chi 2 nbsp is known as the nonlinear susceptibility tensor and is a characteristic to the materials at the interface of study 15 The generated E 2 w displaystyle E 2 omega nbsp and corresponding x 2 displaystyle chi 2 nbsp have been shown to reveal information about the orientation of molecules at a surface interface the interfacial analytical chemistry of surfaces and chemical reactions at interfaces From planar surfaces edit Main article Surface second harmonic generation nbsp A depiction of the second harmonic generation setup for measuring the orientation of phenol at the air water interface Early experiments in the field demonstrated second harmonic generation from metal surfaces 16 Eventually SHG was used to probe the air water interface allowing for detailed information about molecular orientation and ordering at one of the most ubiquitous of surfaces 17 It can be shown that the specific elements of x 2 displaystyle chi 2 nbsp x z z z 2 N s cos 3 8 a z z z 2 x x z x 2 1 2 N s cos 8 sin 2 8 a z z z 2 displaystyle begin aligned chi zzz 2 amp N s left langle cos 3 theta right rangle alpha zzz 2 chi xzx 2 amp frac 1 2 N s left langle cos theta sin 2 theta right rangle alpha zzz 2 end aligned nbsp where Ns is the adsorbate density 8 is the angle that the molecular axis z makes with the surface normal Z and a z z z 2 displaystyle alpha zzz 2 nbsp is the dominating element of the nonlinear polarizability of a molecule at an interface allow one to determine 8 given laboratory coordinates x y z 18 Using an interference SHG method to determine these elements of x 2 the first molecular orientation measurement showed that the hydroxyl group of phenol pointed downwards into the water at the air water interface as expected due to the potential of hydroxyl groups to form hydrogen bonds Additionally SHG at planar surfaces has revealed differences in pKa and rotational motions of molecules at interfaces From non planar surfaces edit nbsp Cartoon depicting ordered molecules at a small spherical surface An ultrafast pump laser pumps light with frequency w which generates light at 2w from the locally non centrosymmetric media Second harmonic light can also be generated from surfaces that are locally planar but may have inversion symmetry centrosymmetric on a larger scale Specifically recent theory has demonstrated that SHG from small spherical particles micro and nanometer scale is allowed by proper treatment of Rayleigh scattering scattering without a change in frequency from absorbed to emitted waves 19 At the surface of a small sphere inversion symmetry is broken allowing for SHG and other even order harmonics to occur For a colloidal system of microparticles at relatively low concentrations the total SH signal I 2 w total displaystyle I 2 omega text total nbsp is given by I 2 w total j 1 n E j 2 w 2 n E 2 w 2 n I 2 w displaystyle I 2 omega text total propto sum limits j 1 n left E j 2 omega right 2 n left E 2 omega right 2 nI 2 omega nbsp where E j 2 w displaystyle E j 2 omega nbsp is the SH electric field generated by the jth particle and n the density of particles 20 The SH light generated from each particle is coherent but adds incoherently to the SH light generated by others as long as density is low enough Thus SH light is only generated from the interfaces of the spheres and their environment and is independent of particle particle interactions It has also been shown that the second harmonic electric field E 2 w displaystyle E 2 omega nbsp scales with the radius of the particle cubed a3 Besides spheres other small particles like rods have been studied similarly by SHG 21 Both immobilized and colloidal systems of small particles can be investigated Recent experiments using second harmonic generation of non planar systems include transport kinetics across living cell membranes 22 and demonstrations of SHG in complex nanomaterials 23 Radiation pattern edit nbsp SHG radiation pattern excited with a Gaussian beam in a homogeneous medium A or at an interface between opposite polarities that is parallel to the propagation B Only the forward SHG is represented The SHG radiation pattern generated by an exciting Gaussian beam also has a homogeneous 2D Gaussian profile if the nonlinear medium being excited is homogeneous A However if the exciting beam is positioned at an interface between opposite polarities boundary B that is parallel to the beam propagation see figure the SHG will be split into two lobes whose amplitudes have opposite sign i e are p displaystyle pi nbsp phase shifted 24 These boundaries can be found in the sarcomeres of muscles protein myosin for instance Note that we have considered here only the forward generation See also Second harmonic imaging microscopy Forward over backward SHG Moreover the SHG phase matching can also result in k 2 w 2 k w displaystyle vec k 2 omega 2 vec k omega nbsp some SHG is also emitted in backward epi direction When the phase matching is not fulfilled as in biological tissues the backward signal comes from a sufficiently high phase mismatch which allow a small backward contribution to compensate for it 25 Unlike fluorescence the spatial coherence of the process constrain it to emit only in those two directions but the coherence length in backward is always way smaller than in forward meaning there is always more forward than backward SHG signal 26 nbsp SHG radiation pattern in forward F and backward B from different dipoles arangment a single dipoles thus F B b a small stack of dipoles F gt B c a large stack of dipoles F gt gt B d the Gouy phase shift cancels the SHGs F amp B weakThe forward F to backward B ratio is dependent on the arrangement of the different dipoles green in figure that are being excited With only one dipole a in the figure F B but F becomes higher than B when more dipoles are stacked along the propagation direction b and c However the Gouy phase shift of the Gaussian beam will imply a p displaystyle pi nbsp phase shift between the SHGs generated at the edges of the focal volume and can thus result in destructive interferences zero signal if there are dipoles at these edges having the same orientation case d in the figure Commercial uses editSecond harmonic generation is used by the laser industry to make green 532 nm lasers from a 1064 nm source The 1064 nm light is fed through a bulk KDP crystal In high quality diode lasers the crystal is coated on the output side with an infrared filter to prevent leakage of intense 1064 nm or 808 nm infrared light into the beam Both of these wavelengths are invisible and do not trigger the defensive blink reflex reaction in the eye and can therefore be a special hazard to the human eyes Furthermore some laser safety eyewear intended for argon or other green lasers may filter out the green component giving a false sense of safety but transmit the infrared Nevertheless some green laser pointer products have become available on the market which omit the expensive infrared filter often without warning 27 Second harmonic generation is also used for measuring ultra short pulse width with autocorrelators Other applications editUltra short pulse measurement edit Characterizing an ultrashort pulse like measuring its temporal width cannot be done directly with electronics only as the time scale is below 1ps 10 12 displaystyle 10 12 nbsp sec it needs to use the pulse itself that is why an autocorrelation function is often used SHG has the advantage of mixing two input fields to generate the harmonic one it is thus a good candidate but not the only one to perform such a pulse measurement Optical autocorrelation in its intensity or fringe resolved interferometric version use SHG 28 unlike field autocorrelation Also most versions of the FROG called SHG FROG use SHG to mix the delayed fields 29 Second harmonic generation microscopy edit Main article Second harmonic imaging microscopy In biological and medical science the effect of second harmonic generation is used for high resolution optical microscopy Because of the non zero second harmonic coefficient only non centrosymmetric structures are capable of emitting SHG light One such structure is collagen which is found in most load bearing tissues Using a short pulse laser such as a femtosecond laser and a set of appropriate filters the excitation light can be easily separated from the emitted frequency doubled SHG signal This allows for very high axial and lateral resolution comparable to that of confocal microscopy without having to use pinholes SHG microscopy has been used for studies of the cornea 30 and lamina cribrosa sclerae 31 both of which consist primarily of collagen Second harmonic generation can be produced by several non centrosymmetric organic dyes however most of the organic dyes also generate collateral fluorescence along with second harmonic generation signals 32 Until now only two classes of organic dyes have been shown which do not produce any collateral fluorescence and works purely on second harmonic generation 32 33 Recently using two photon excited fluorescence and second harmonic generation based microscopy a group of Oxford University researchers showed that organic porphyrin type molecules can have different transition dipole moments for two photon fluorescence and second harmonic generation 34 which are otherwise thought to occur from the same transition dipole moment 35 Second harmonic generation microscopy is also used in material science for instance to characterize nanostructured materials 36 Characterization of crystalline materials edit Second harmonic generation is also relevant to characterize organic or inorganic crystals 37 since is one of the most discriminant and rapid technique to detect non centrosymmetry 38 In addition this technique can be used on single crystal as well as on powdered samples One should recall that SHG is only possible from the bulk in non centrosymmetric NC crystals The part of non centroysmmetric crystals in Nature is much lower than centrosymmetric crystals circa 22 of the Cambridge structural database 39 but the frequency of NC crystals increases by a lot in pharmaceutical biological and electronic fields because of the particular properties of these crystals piezoelectricity pyroelectricity polar phases chirality In 1968 40 7 years after the first experimental evidence of SHG on single crystal 9 Kurtz and Perry started to develop a SHG analyzer to rapidly detect the presence or not of inversion center in powdered crystalline samples The detection of a SHG signal has been shown to be reliable and sensitive test for the detection of crystalline non centrosymmetry with the confidence level higher than 99 It is a relevant tool to resolve space group ambiguities that can arise from Friedel s Law in single crystal X ray diffraction 41 Furthermore the method is referenced in the International Tables for Crystallography and is described as a powerful method of testing crystalline materials for the absence of a symmetry center 42 One possible application is also to rapidly discriminate chiral phases such as conglomerate that are of particular interest for pharmaceutical industries 43 It could also be used as a technique to probe the structural purity of material if one of the impurities is NC reaching a detection threshold as low as 1 ppm 44 using Kurtz amp Perry apparatus up to one part in 10 billion by volume using a SHG microscope 45 Due to the high sensitivity of the technique it can be a helpful tool in the accurate determination of phase diagram 46 and can also be used to monitor phase transitions polymorphic transition dehydration when at least one of the phases is NC 47 48 49 Theoretical derivation plane wave editAt low conversion edit The simplest case for analysis of second harmonic generation is a plane wave of amplitude E w traveling in a nonlinear medium in the direction of its k vector A polarization is generated at the second harmonic frequency 50 P 2 w e 0 x 2 E 2 w 2 e 0 d eff 2 w w w E 2 w displaystyle P 2 omega varepsilon 0 chi 2 E 2 omega 2 varepsilon 0 d text eff 2 omega omega omega E 2 omega nbsp where d eff displaystyle d text eff nbsp is the effective nonlinear optical coefficient which is dependent on specific components of x 2 displaystyle chi 2 nbsp that are involved in this particular interaction The wave equation at 2w assuming negligible loss and asserting the slowly varying envelope approximation is E 2 w z i w n 2 w c d eff E 2 w e i D k z displaystyle frac partial E 2 omega partial z frac i omega n 2 omega c d text eff E 2 omega e i Delta k z nbsp where D k k 2 w 2 k w displaystyle Delta k k 2 omega 2k omega nbsp At low conversion efficiency E 2w E w the amplitude E w displaystyle E omega nbsp remains essentially constant over the interaction length ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp Then with the boundary condition E 2 w z 0 0 displaystyle E 2 omega z 0 0 nbsp we obtain E 2 w z ℓ i w d eff n 2 w c E 2 w 0 ℓ e i D k z d z i w d eff n 2 w c E 2 w ℓ sin 1 2 D k ℓ 1 2 D k ℓ e i 2 D k ℓ displaystyle E 2 omega z ell frac i omega d text eff n 2 omega c E 2 omega int 0 ell e i Delta k z dz frac i omega d text eff n 2 omega c E 2 omega ell frac sin left frac 1 2 Delta k ell right frac 1 2 Delta k ell e frac i 2 Delta k ell nbsp In terms of the optical intensity I n 2 e 0 m 0 E 2 displaystyle I n 2 sqrt varepsilon 0 mu 0 E 2 nbsp this is I 2 w ℓ 2 w 2 d eff 2 ℓ 2 n 2 w n w 2 c 3 e 0 sin 1 2 D k ℓ 1 2 D k ℓ 2 I 2 w displaystyle I 2 omega ell frac 2 omega 2 d text eff 2 ell 2 n 2 omega n omega 2 c 3 varepsilon 0 left frac sin left frac 1 2 Delta k ell right frac 1 2 Delta k ell right 2 I 2 omega nbsp This intensity is maximized for the phase matched condition Dk 0 If the process is not phase matched the driving polarization at w goes in and out of phase with generated wave E 2w and conversion oscillates as sin Dkℓ 2 The coherence length is defined as ℓ c p D k displaystyle ell c frac pi Delta k nbsp It does not pay to use a nonlinear crystal much longer than the coherence length Periodic poling and quasi phase matching provide another approach to this problem With depletion edit nbsp Diagram of second harmonic generation with perfect phase matching D k 0 displaystyle Delta k 0 nbsp nbsp Diagram of second harmonic generation with an imperfect phase matching D k 0 displaystyle Delta k neq 0 nbsp In this case energy flows forth and back from the pump to the frequency doubled signal and having a thick crystal can lead to a smaller amount of SHG produced When the conversion to 2nd harmonic becomes significant it becomes necessary to include depletion of the fundamental The energy conversion states that all the involved fields verify the Manley Rowe relations One then has the coupled equations 51 E 2 w z i w n 2 w c d eff E 2 w e i D k z E w z i w n w c d eff E 2 w E w e i D k z displaystyle begin aligned frac partial E 2 omega partial z amp frac i omega n 2 omega c d text eff E 2 omega e i Delta k z 5pt frac partial E omega partial z amp frac i omega n omega c d text eff E 2 omega E omega e i Delta k z end aligned nbsp where displaystyle nbsp denotes the complex conjugate For simplicity assume phase matched generation D k 0 displaystyle Delta k 0 nbsp Then energy conservation requires that n 2 w E 2 w E 2 w z c c n w E w E w z c c displaystyle n 2 omega left E 2 omega frac partial E 2 omega partial z text c c right n omega left E omega frac partial E omega partial z text c c right nbsp where c c displaystyle text c c nbsp is the complex conjugate of the other term or n 2 w E 2 w 2 n w E w 2 n 2 w E 0 2 displaystyle n 2 omega left E 2 omega right 2 n omega E omega 2 n 2 omega E 0 2 nbsp nbsp Phase matched SHG with source depletion blue and corresponding excitation orange L is the interaction length ℓ in the text Now we solve the equations with the premise E w E w e i f w E 2 w E 2 w e i f 2 w displaystyle begin aligned E omega amp left E omega right e i varphi omega E 2 omega amp left E 2 omega right e i varphi 2 omega end aligned nbsp and obtain d E 2 w d z i w d eff n w c E 0 2 E 2 w 2 e 2 i f w i f 2 w displaystyle frac d left E 2 omega right dz frac i omega d text eff n omega c left E 0 2 left E 2 omega right 2 right e 2i varphi omega i varphi 2 omega nbsp which leads to 0 E 2 w ℓ d E 2 w E 0 2 E 2 w 2 0 ℓ i w d eff n w c e 2 i f w i f 2 w d z displaystyle int 0 left E 2 omega right ell frac d left E 2 omega right E 0 2 left E 2 omega right 2 int 0 ell frac i omega d text eff n omega c e 2i varphi omega i varphi 2 omega dz nbsp Using d x a 2 x 2 1 a tanh 1 x a displaystyle int frac dx a 2 x 2 frac 1 a tanh 1 frac x a nbsp we get E 2 w z ℓ E 0 tanh i E 0 ℓ w d eff n w c e 2 i f w i f 2 w displaystyle left E 2 omega right z ell E 0 tanh left frac iE 0 ell omega d text eff n omega c e 2i varphi omega i varphi 2 omega right nbsp If we assume a real d eff displaystyle d text eff nbsp the relative phases for real harmonic growth must be such that e 2 i f w i f 2 w i displaystyle e 2i varphi omega i varphi 2 omega i nbsp Then I 2 w ℓ I w 0 tanh 2 E 0 w d eff ℓ n w c displaystyle I 2 omega ell I omega 0 tanh 2 left frac E 0 omega d text eff ell n omega c right nbsp or I 2 w ℓ I w 0 tanh 2 G ℓ displaystyle I 2 omega ell I omega 0 tanh 2 Gamma ell nbsp where G w d eff E 0 n c displaystyle Gamma omega d text eff E 0 nc nbsp From I 2 w ℓ I w ℓ I w 0 displaystyle I 2 omega ell I omega ell I omega 0 nbsp it also follows that I w ℓ I w 0 sech 2 G ℓ displaystyle I omega ell I omega 0 operatorname sech 2 Gamma ell nbsp Theoretical expression with Gaussian beams editThe excitation wave is assumed to be a Gaussian beam of amplitude A 1 A 0 2 p z R i q z exp i k 1 x 2 y 2 2 q z displaystyle A 1 A 0 sqrt frac 2 pi frac z R iq z exp left ik 1 frac x 2 y 2 2q z right nbsp with q z z i z R displaystyle q z z iz R nbsp z displaystyle z nbsp the direction of propagation z R displaystyle z R nbsp the Rayleigh range k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp the wave vector Each wave verifies the wave equation x 2 y 2 2 i k 1 z A x y z k 1 0 for the fundamental w n 2 c 2 x n A x y z k 1 e i D k z for n th harmonic displaystyle left frac partial partial x 2 frac partial partial y 2 2ik 1 frac partial partial z right A x y z k 1 begin cases 0 amp text for the fundamental frac omega n 2 c 2 chi n A x y z k 1 e i Delta k z amp text for n text th harmonic end cases nbsp where D k k n k 1 displaystyle Delta k k n k 1 nbsp With phase matching edit It can be shown that A n i w n 2 n n w c A 0 2 p n z R 2 z x n u q u 2 d u exp i k n x 2 y 2 2 q z displaystyle A n i frac omega n 2n n omega c left A 0 sqrt frac 2 pi right n z R 2 int infty z frac chi n u q u 2 du exp left ik n frac x 2 y 2 2q z right nbsp a Gaussian is a solution of the equation n 2 for SHG No phase matching edit nbsp Intensity SHG phase matched or not The medium width is supposed to be much higher than z the Rayleigh range at 20µm excitation wavelength of 0 8µm and optical index of 2 2 A non perfect phase matching is a more realistic condition in practice especially in biological samples The paraxial approximation is however supposed still valid k n n k 1 displaystyle k n nk 1 nbsp and in the harmonic expression x n z displaystyle chi n z nbsp is now x n z e i D k z displaystyle chi n z e i Delta k z nbsp In the special case of SHG n 2 in a medium of length L and a focus position z 0 displaystyle z 0 nbsp the intensity writes 52 I 2 w 2 w 2 p c 2 e 0 w 0 2 n 2 w n w 2 I w 2 x 2 2 z 0 z 0 L e i D k z 1 i z z R 2 d z displaystyle I 2 omega frac 2 omega 2 pi c 2 varepsilon 0 w 0 2 n 2 omega n omega 2 I omega 2 chi 2 2 left int z 0 z 0 L frac e i Delta k z 1 iz z R right 2 dz nbsp where c displaystyle c nbsp is the speed of light in vacuum e 0 displaystyle varepsilon 0 nbsp the vacuum permittivity n n w displaystyle n n omega nbsp the optical index of the medium at n w displaystyle n omega nbsp and w 0 displaystyle w 0 nbsp the waist size of excitation Thus the SHG intensity quickly decays in the bulk 0 lt z 0 lt L displaystyle 0 lt z 0 lt L nbsp due to the Gouy phase shift of the Gaussian beam In conformity with experiments the SHG signal vanishes in the bulk if the medium thickness is too large and the SHG must be generated at the surface of the material the conversion therefore does not strictly scales with the square of the number of scatterers contrary to what the plane wave model indicates Interestingly the signal also vanishes in bulk for higher orders like THG Materials used for second harmonic generation editMaterials capable of generating a second harmonic are crystals without inversion symmetry This eliminates water cubic symmetry crystals and glass 50 Here are some crystals used with certain types of laser for SHG conversion Fundamental excitation at 600 1500 nm 53 BiBO BiB3O6 Fundamental excitation at 570 4000 nm 54 lithium iodate LiIO3 Fundamental excitation at 800 1100 nm often 860 or 980 nm 55 potassium niobate KNbO3 Fundamental excitation at 410 2000 nm BBO b BaB2O4 56 Fundamental excitation at 984 3400 nm KTP KTiOPO4 or KTA 57 Fundamental excitation at 1064 nm monopotassium phosphate KDP KH2PO4 lithium triborate LiB3O5 CsLiB6O10 and barium borate BBO b BaB2O4 Fundamental excitation at 1319 nm KNbO3 BBO b BaB2O4 monopotassium phosphate KDP KH2PO4 LiIO3 LiNbO3 and potassium titanyl phosphate KTP KTiOPO4 Fundamental excitation at 1000 2000 nm periodically poled crystals like PPLN 58 Notably filamentous biological proteins with a cylindrical symmetric such as collagen tubulin or myosin but also certain carbohydrates such as starch or cellulose are also quite good converters of SHG fundamental in the near infrared 59 See also editHalf harmonic generation Nonlinear optics Optical frequency multiplier Second harmonic imaging microscopy Spontaneous parametric down conversion Surface second harmonic generation Harmonic generationReferences edit He Maosheng Forbes Jeffrey M 2022 12 07 Rossby wave second harmonic generation observed in the middle atmosphere Nature Communications 13 1 7544 doi 10 1038 s41467 022 35142 3 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 9729661 PMID 36476614 Franken P A Hill A E Peters C W Weinreich G 1961 08 15 Generation of Optical Harmonics Physical Review Letters 7 4 118 119 doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 7 118 Boyd R 2007 The Nonlinear Optical Susceptibility Nonlinear optics third ed pp 1 67 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 369470 6 00001 0 ISBN 9780123694706 S2CID 15660817 Cardoso G C 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Scattering in Multi Harmonic Light Microscopy Biophysical Journal 80 3 1568 1574 Bibcode 2001BpJ 80 1568M doi 10 1016 S0006 3495 01 76129 2 ISSN 0006 3495 PMC 1301348 PMID 11222317 Campagnola Paul J Loew Leslie M 2003 Second harmonic imaging microscopy for visualizing biomolecular arrays in cells tissues and organisms Nature Biotechnology 21 11 1356 1360 doi 10 1038 nbt894 ISSN 1087 0156 PMID 14595363 S2CID 18701570 LaComb Ronald Nadiarnykh Oleg Townsend Sallie S Campagnola Paul J 2008 Phase matching considerations in second harmonic generation from tissues Effects on emission directionality conversion efficiency and observed morphology Optics Communications 281 7 1823 1832 Bibcode 2008OptCo 281 1823L doi 10 1016 j optcom 2007 10 040 ISSN 0030 4018 PMC 2390911 PMID 19343083 A warning about IR in green cheap green laser pointers Trebino Rick Zeek Erik 2000 Chap4 The Autocorrelation the Spectrum and Phase Retrieval Frequency Resolved Optical Gating The Measurement of Ultrashort Laser Pulses Springer pp 61 99 doi 10 1007 978 1 4615 1181 6 4 ISBN 978 1 4615 1181 6 Trebino Rick 2003 Chap5 FROG Frequency Resolved Optical Gating The Measurement of Ultrashort Laser Pulses Springer pp 61 99 doi 10 1007 978 1 4615 1181 6 5 ISBN 978 1 4615 1181 6 Han M Giese G Bille J 2005 Second harmonic generation imaging of collagen fibrils in cornea and sclera Optics Express 13 15 5791 7 Bibcode 2005OExpr 13 5791H doi 10 1364 OPEX 13 005791 PMID 19498583 Brown Donald J Morishige Naoyuki Neekhra Aneesh Minckler Don S Jester James V 2007 Application of second harmonic imaging microscopy to assess structural changes in optic nerve head structure ex vivo Journal of Biomedical Optics 12 2 024029 Bibcode 2007JBO 12b4029B doi 10 1117 1 2717540 PMID 17477744 S2CID 33236022 a b Khadria A Fleischhauer J Boczarow I Wilkinson JD Kohl MM Anderson HL 2018 Porphyrin Dyes for Nonlinear Optical Imaging of Live Cells iScience 4 153 163 Bibcode 2018iSci 4 153K doi 10 1016 j isci 2018 05 015 PMC 6147020 PMID 30240737 Nuriya M Fukushima S Momotake A Shinotsuka T Yasui M Arai T 2016 Multimodal two photon imaging using a second harmonic generation specific dye Nature Communications 7 11557 Bibcode 2016NatCo 711557N doi 10 1038 ncomms11557 PMC 4865818 PMID 27156702 Khadria A Coene Y Gawel P Roche C Clays K Anderson HL 2017 Push pull pyropheophorbides for nonlinear optical imaging Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry 15 4 947 956 doi 10 1039 C6OB02319C PMID 28054076 S2CID 3540505 Reeve JE Corbett AD Boczarow I Wilson T Bayley H Anderson HL 2012 Probing the Orientational Distribution of Dyes in Membranes through Multiphoton Microscopy Biophysical Journal 103 5 907 917 Bibcode 2012BpJ 103 907R doi 10 1016 j bpj 2012 08 003 PMC 3433607 PMID 23009840 Valev V K 2012 Characterization of nanostructured plasmonic surfaces with second harmonic generation Langmuir 28 44 15454 15471 doi 10 1021 la302485c PMID 22889193 Simon Florent Clevers Simon Dupray Valerie Coquerel Gerard 2015 Relevance of the Second Harmonic Generation to Characterize Crystalline Samples Chemical Engineering amp Technology 38 6 971 983 doi 10 1002 ceat 201400756 Abrahams S C 1972 04 01 Letter to the Editor Journal of Applied Crystallography 5 2 143 doi 10 1107 S0021889872009045 ISSN 0021 8898 CCDC Statistics Kurtz S K Perry T T 1968 A Powder Technique for the Evaluation of Nonlinear Optical Materials Journal of Applied Physics 39 8 3798 3813 Bibcode 1968JAP 39 3798K doi 10 1063 1 1656857 ISSN 0021 8979 Dougherty J P Kurtz S K 1976 04 01 A second harmonic analyzer for the detection of non centrosymmetry Journal of Applied Crystallography 9 2 145 158 doi 10 1107 S0021889876010789 ISSN 0021 8898 International tables for crystallography International Union of Crystallography 5th rev ed Dordrecht Kluwer 2002 ISBN 0 7923 6591 7 OCLC 48400542 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Galland Arnaud Dupray Valerie Berton Benjamin Morin Grognet Sandrine Sanselme Morgane Atmani Hassan Coquerel Gerard 2009 06 03 Spotting Conglomerates by Second Harmonic Generation Crystal Growth amp Design 9 6 2713 2718 doi 10 1021 cg801356m ISSN 1528 7483 Clevers S Simon F Dupray V Coquerel G 2013 Temperature resolved second harmonic generation to probe the structural purity of m hydroxybenzoic acid Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry 112 1 271 277 doi 10 1007 s10973 012 2763 y ISSN 1388 6150 S2CID 138727698 Wanapun Duangporn Kestur Umesh S Kissick David J Simpson Garth J Taylor Lynne S 2010 Selective Detection and Quantitation of Organic Molecule Crystallization by Second Harmonic Generation Microscopy Analytical Chemistry 82 13 5425 5432 doi 10 1021 ac100564f ISSN 0003 2700 PMID 20515064 Yuan Lina Clevers Simon Couvrat Nicolas Cartigny Yohann Dupray Valerie Coquerel Gerard 2016 Precise Urea Water Eutectic Composition by Temperature Resolved Second Harmonic Generation Chemical Engineering amp Technology 39 7 1326 1332 doi 10 1002 ceat 201600032 Yuan Lina Clevers Simon Burel Antoine Negrier Philippe Barrio Maria del Ben Hassine Bacem Mondieig Denise Dupray Valerie Tamarit Josep Ll Coquerel Gerard 2017 06 07 New Intermediate Polymorph of 1 Fluoro adamantane and Its Second Order like Transition toward the Low Temperature Phase Crystal Growth amp Design 17 6 3395 3401 doi 10 1021 acs cgd 7b00353 hdl 2117 106369 ISSN 1528 7483 Clevers S Rougeot C Simon F Sanselme M Dupray V Coquerel G 2014 Detection of order disorder transition in organic solids by using temperature resolved second harmonic generation TR SHG Journal of Molecular Structure 1078 61 67 Bibcode 2014JMoSt1078 61C doi 10 1016 j molstruc 2014 04 007 Clevers Simon Simon Florent Sanselme Morgane Dupray Valerie Coquerel Gerard 2013 08 07 Monotropic Transition Mechanism of m Hydroxybenzoic Acid Investigated by Temperature Resolved Second Harmonic Generation Crystal Growth amp Design 13 8 3697 3704 doi 10 1021 cg400712s ISSN 1528 7483 a b Boyd R W 2008 Nonlinear Optics 3rd edition ISBN 9780121216801 Zernike Frits Midwinter John E 1973 Applied Nonlinear Optics John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 0 486 45360 X Stoller Patrick Celliers Peter M Reiser Karen M Rubenchik Alexander M 2003 Quantitative second harmonic generation microscopy in collagen Applied Optics 42 25 5209 19 Bibcode 2003ApOpt 42 5209S doi 10 1364 AO 42 005209 ISSN 0003 6935 PMID 12962402 BiBO Crystals newlightphotonics com Retrieved 2019 11 01 LiIO3 crystals Lithium Iodate Crystal shalomeo com Retrieved 2019 11 01 KNbO3 laser crylink com Retrieved 2019 11 01 BBO Crystals newlightphotonics com Retrieved 2019 11 01 KTP Crystals unitedcrystals com Retrieved 2019 11 01 Meyn J P Laue C Knappe R Wallenstein R Fejer M M 2001 Fabrication of periodically poled lithium tantalate for UV generation with diode lasers Applied Physics B 73 2 111 114 Bibcode 2001ApPhB 73 111M doi 10 1007 s003400100623 S2CID 119763435 Pavone Francesco S Campagnola Paul J 2016 Second Harmonic Generation Imaging 2nd ed CRC Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 4398 4914 9 External links editArticles edit Parameswaran K R Kurz J R Roussev M M Fejer 2002 Observation of 99 pump depletion in single pass second harmonic generation in a periodically poled lithium niobate waveguide Optics Letters 27 1 43 45 Bibcode 2002OptL 27 43P doi 10 1364 ol 27 000043 PMID 18007710 Frequency doubling Encyclopedia of laser physics and technology Retrieved 2006 11 04 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second harmonic generation amp oldid 1185020589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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