Theoretical study on nonlinearoptical properties of organicchromophores in solutions

University dissertation from Stockholm : KTH

Abstract: Inter-molecular interactions have significant influences on linear and nonlinear optical properties of molecules including one- and two-photon absorptions, emissions, and various high order nonlinear polarizations. The related investigation has become an active and challenging research area. The theoretical structure-to-property relationship obtained from quantum chemical calculations of single organic conjugated molecules often can not be directly applied to real materials in condensed phases. One has to consider the effect of environment, that is, inter-molecular interactions, where the model systems experience in real experiments or applications. The change of molecular conformations under all kinds of interactions and its effects on linear and nonlinear optical properties are the central issue of this thesis.Special attentions have been paid to symmetrical diamino substituted distyrylbenzene chromophores with different torsional angles, two dipolar merocyanine dyes of various orientations, two isomers of a V-shaped 2-hydroxypyrimidine derivative and their various dimers, and the structural fluctuations of interacting polar chromophores in solutions. Quantum chemical methods in combination with molecular dynamics simulations have been employed to study molecular conformations and optical properties in solutions, in particular the solvent and aggregation effects on one- and two-photon absorption. More specifically, time-dependent density functional theory has been used for all electronic calculations, while the polarizable continuum model and supermolecule approach have also been employed to take into account solvent effects.Moreover, the propagation of an ultrashort laser pulse through a one-dimensional asymmetric organic molecular medium which possesses large permanent dipole moments has been simulated by solving full Maxwell-Bloch equations using predictor-corrector finite-difference time-domain method. We have focused on the supercontinuum generation of spectra and the formation of attosecond pulses.

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