RESUMEN
In this work, we demonstrate the properties of Rhodamine B-doped polymeric cylindrical microlasers to perform either as gain amplification devices through amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) or as optical lasing gain devices. A study based on different %wt concentrations of microcavity families with distinct geometrical features demonstrates the characteristic dependence on either gain amplification phenomena. Principal component analysis (PCA) discriminates the relationship between the main ASE and lasing properties and the geometrical aspects of the cavity families. ASE and optical lasing thresholds were found, respectively, as low as 0.2 µJcm-2 and 0.1 µJcm-2 passing the best-reported microlaser performances in literature for cylindrical cavities, even in comparison with those based on 2D patterns. Moreover, our microlasers showed ultrahigh Q-factor of â¼3 × 106, and for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, a visible emission comb constituted by above a hundred peaks at 40 µJcm-2 with a registered free spectral range (FSR) of 0.25 nm corroborated through the whispery gallery mode (WGM) theory.
RESUMEN
We demonstrate an experimental technique for isolating and enhancing quadrupolar second-harmonic generation in isotropic materials by using two orthogonally polarized laser beams that create wavelength-scale, forward-radiating gradients in the second-harmonic polarization.
RESUMEN
Optical second-harmonic generation (SHG) is used as a noninvasive probe of the interfaces of Si nanocrystals (NCs) embedded uniformly in an SiO2 matrix. Measurements of the generated SH mode verify that the second-harmonic polarization has a nonlocal dipole form proportional to (E x Delta inverted) E that depends on inhomogeneities in the incident field E, as proposed in recent models based on a locally noncentrosymmetric dipolar response averaged over the spherical NC interfaces. A two-beam SHG geometry is found to enhance this polarization greatly compared to single-beam SHG, yielding strong signals useful for scanning, spectroscopy, and real-time monitoring. This configuration provides a general strategy for enhancing the second-order nonlinear response of centrosymmetric samples, as demonstrated here for both Si nanocomposites and their glass substrates.