1993
DOI: 10.1080/02678299308027712
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Strongly non-linear optical ferroelectric liquid crystals for frequency doubling

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Cited by 77 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…1 implies a lower bound for d eff of Ϸ4.5 pm/V, which, in Ϸ3 h rises to 5.0 pm/V. We also conclude that the SHG in the K phase arises purely from the second order susceptibility, i.e., there is no contribution from electric field-induced SHG due to (3) . Figures 2 and 3 present the quite distinct dependence of d eff sinc͑⌬kL͒/n 3/2 on in the SmC* ͑Tϭ42°C, E 0 ϭ12 V/m͒ and K phases ͑Tϭ37°C, E 0 ϭ0 V/m͒, respectively, for 2 ϭp and s. As Eq.…”
mentioning
confidence: 75%
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“…1 implies a lower bound for d eff of Ϸ4.5 pm/V, which, in Ϸ3 h rises to 5.0 pm/V. We also conclude that the SHG in the K phase arises purely from the second order susceptibility, i.e., there is no contribution from electric field-induced SHG due to (3) . Figures 2 and 3 present the quite distinct dependence of d eff sinc͑⌬kL͒/n 3/2 on in the SmC* ͑Tϭ42°C, E 0 ϭ12 V/m͒ and K phases ͑Tϭ37°C, E 0 ϭ0 V/m͒, respectively, for 2 ϭp and s. As Eq.…”
mentioning
confidence: 75%
“…[1][2][3] These chiral materials are noncentrosymmetric in the smectic-C* ͑SmC*͒ phase (C 2 point symmetry͒. They thus possess a finite second order NLO susceptibility i jk (2) , which, in the case of second harmonic generation ͑SHG͒, is commonly expressed in terms of the contracted tensor 4 d i j .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The key result of our earlier work 6 was the achievement of an effective susceptibility d eff Ϸ4.5 pm/V ͑the highest value reported to date in a chiral liquid crystal͒, using a molecule whose intrinsic ␤ is, however, considerably less than that attained by recent synthesis efforts. 4 The value of d eff was stable without the need for surface stabilization ͑i.e., very narrow sample cells͒ or for applied fields. In the following, we present new results from optical microscopy and x-ray scattering which confirm that the low temperature structure is a molecular crystal and reveal that the molecular orientation frozen in the crystal is spatially modulated on a macroscopic length scale, an effect which may depend on the history of the applied electric field.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…These materials, which are generally far easier and cheaper to process than inorganic crystals and which offer a high degree of integrability into optoelectronic devices, may be broadly classified into two categories: inherently isotropic systems like glassy polymers doped with or bonded to hyperpolarizable molecules, 1 which must be aligned by large external fields to show a bulk second-order NLO susceptibility, and mesogenic systems, such as chiral liquid crystals [2][3][4] and organic molecular crystals, where the susceptibility arises spontaneously from the broken symmetry of an ordered mesophase. In general, a nonzero macroscopic susceptibility d arises from a combination 1,5 of constituent molecules which have electric field-induced dipole moments ͑giving rise to a second-order molecular susceptibility ␤͒ and a collective structure wherein, on average, the individual dipoles are oriented so that the system lacks mirror symmetry, or is noncentrosymmetric.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first approaches to the design of NLO FLCs used normal calamitic mesogens [2][3][4][5][6][7][8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%