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Local Rigidity by Flexibility: Unusual Design for Organic THz-Device Materials
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Publication Year
2023-11-06
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Citation
Advanced Optical Materials, Vol.11
Keyword
nonlinear opticsorganic crystalsterahertz waves
Mesh Keyword
Device materialsEnergy conformersLower energiesMolecular phononsNon-polarOrganic crystalOrganicsPhonon vibrationsTera HertzTerahertz device
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic MaterialsAtomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Abstract
Terahertz (THz) waves interact with molecular phonon vibrations of organic matter. When designing organic THz-device materials, conformational flexible groups (CFGs) are in most cases avoided. CFGs create many low-energy conformers with high conformational entropy, which results in large and many phonon vibration modes that lead to undesired self-absorption of THz waves. Here, nonpolar CFGs only having weak intermolecular interaction capability are unusually introduced into organic THz-device materials, utilized for efficient THz wave generation. Newly designed THz-source crystals possess nonpolar methylene -(CH2)n- units having high conformational flexibility. Compared to previously reported benchmark crystals without methylene CFGs, introducing methylene CFGs significantly reduces void volume in newly designed crystals. This leads to the suppression of molecular phonon vibrations below 2.0 THz (i.e., introducing flexibility results in local rigidity). At infrared pump wavelengths, new CFG-contained crystals generate a strong THz electric field that is one order of magnitude stronger than that generated in inorganic ZnTe crystals. CFG-contained crystals exhibit a flatter spectral shape of the generated THz wave than benchmark crystals without methylene CFGs. Therefore, the introduction of CFGs is a very intriguing design strategy for organic THz-device materials to reduce the limitations caused by phonon vibrations.
ISSN
2195-1071
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/33479
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/adom.202300807
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Type
Article
Funding
D.\\u2010J.K. and I.C.Y. contributed equally to this work. This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning, Korea (Nos. 2019K1A3A1A14057973, 2021R1A2C1005012, 2021R1A5A6002853, and RS\\u20102023\\u201000208484); the Institute of Information and communications Technology Planning and Evaluation (IITP) grant funded by the Korea government (MSIT) (No. 2022\\u20100\\u201000624); and the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), Switzerland (No. IZKSZ2_188194). X\\u2010ray structural analysis was supported by the Basic Science Research Program through the NRF funded by the Ministry of Education (2019R1I1A2A01058066 and 2021R1A6A1A10044950).
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Yun, Hoseop윤호섭
Department of Chemistry
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