Infrared to Ultraviolet Measurements of Two-Photon Absorption and n2 in Wide Bandgap Solids
Abstract
The bound electronic nonlinear refractive index, n(sub 2), and two-photon absorption (2PA) coefficient, beta, are measured in a variety of inorganic dielectric solids at the four harmonics of the Nd:YAG laser using Zeta scan. The specific materials studied are: barium fluoride (BaF2), calcite (CaCO3), potassium bromide (KBr), lithium fluoride (LiF), magnesium fluoride (MgF2), sapphire (AbO3), a tellurite glass (75%Te0z+20%ZnO + 5%Na2O) and fused silica (SiO2). We also report n2 and beta in three second-order, chi(expn 2), nonlinear crystals: potassium titanyl phosphate (KTiOPO4 or KTP), lithium niobate (LiNbO3), and beta-barium borate (beta-BaB2O4 or BBO). Nonlinear absorption or refraction can alter the wavelength conversion efficiency in these materials. The results of this study are compared to a simple two-parabolic band model originally developed to describe zincblende semiconductors. This model gives the bandgap energy (E[sub 9]) scaling and spectrum of the change in absorption. The dispersion of n(sub 2) as obtained from a Kramers-Kronig transformation of this absorption change scales as E(sub g expn-4). The agreement of this theory to data for semiconductors was excellent. However, as could be expected, the agreement for these wide bandgap materials is not as good, although general trends such as increasing nonlinearity with decreasing bandgap energy can be seen.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Aug 01, 1996
- Accession Number
- ADA639993
Entities
People
- Ali A. Said
- David J Hagan
- Eric W. Van Stryland
- Mansoor Sheik-bahae
- Richard DeSalvo
Organizations
- University of Central Florida