“…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.…”