Elucidating the Interplay of Optical Function and Structure in Nanomaterials with Nonlinear Optical Microscopy
Restricted (Penn State Only)
- Author:
- Steves, Megan
- Graduate Program:
- Chemistry
- Degree:
- Doctor of Philosophy
- Document Type:
- Dissertation
- Date of Defense:
- May 12, 2022
- Committee Members:
- Mauricio Terrones, Outside Unit & Field Member
Lasse Jensen, Major Field Member
Kenneth Knappenberger, Chair & Dissertation Advisor
John Asbury, Major Field Member
Philip Bevilacqua, Program Head/Chair - Keywords:
- 2D materials
nonlinear optics
ultrafast spectroscopy
2d metals
transition metal dichalcogenides
second harmonic generation
microscopy - Abstract:
- The nonlinear optical properties of materials are essential to laser applications, bio-imaging, and multiphoton lithography. Nonlinear optical properties are strongly dependent on the crystal structure and resonances of the material. Thus, a comprehensive understanding of the structure-function interplay offers opportunities to both optimize and tailor the nonlinear optical properties of materials for improved performance, as well as answer fundamental questions about the structure and chemistry of novel materials. In this dissertation, nonlinear optical microscopy and ultrafast spectroscopy were applied to study 2D materials, a rapidly growing class of materials with an expanding number of applications. This work focuses on MoS2, a two-dimensional semiconductor, and 2D polar metals, a novel heterostructure comprised of SiC, a few-atomic layers of crystalline group III metals, and a graphene cap. In all of these results, the nonlinear optical properties and carrier relaxation dynamics of these materials were rationalized through mechanisms originating from their atomic- and molecular-level structures. In MoS2, very high order multiphoton absorption and saturable second harmonic generation were observed for the first time in a 2D material. In 2D polar metals, we discovered extremely efficient second-harmonic generation which was enabled by their unique out-of-plane bonding character and lattice structure. The polarization properties of the nonlinear emission were also determined by atomic level lattice rotation and symmetry breaking. Carrier relaxation dynamics of 2D metal heterostructures after optical excitation are also described and were found to be sensitive to the metal composition. The role of intercomponent charge transfer in the heterostructures was also observed. In addition to studies on the nonlinear optical properties and carrier dynamics of 2D materials, this dissertation describes the development of several novel techniques for studying the nonlinear optical properties and dynamics of materials with spatial and spectral resolution. Spatially-resolved two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy enables the acquisition of time-resolved 2D excitation/detection spectral maps with micron-scale spatial resolution. Fourier-transform nonlinear optical microscopy is also presented as a method for obtaining nonlinear excitation spectra with sub-diffraction spatial resolution. Ongoing work presented in this dissertation to implement variable-polarization Fourier transform nonlinear optical microscopy will further improve our ability to resolve spectral and polarization responses at sub-diffraction resolution. These advances in instrumentation will enable future studies of the interplay between structure and nonlinear optical function in 2D materials.