7,040 research outputs found
Monte-Carlo Simulations of Spin-Crossover Phenomena Based on a Vibronic Ising-like Model with Realistic Parameters
Materials with spin-crossover (SCO) properties hold great potentials in
information storage and therefore have received a lot of concerns in the recent
decades. The hysteresis phenomena accompanying SCO is attributed to the
intermolecular cooperativity whose underlying mechanism may have a vibronic
origin. In this work, a new vibronic Ising-like model in which the elastic
coupling between SCO centers is included by considering harmonic stretching and
bending (SAB) interactions is proposed and solved by Monte Carlo simulations.
The key parameters in the new model, and , corresponding to the
elastic constant of the stretching and bending mode, respectively, can be
directly related to the macroscopic bulk and shear modulus of the material in
study, which can be readily estimated either based on experimental measurements
or first-principles calculations. The convergence issue in the MC simulations
of the thermal hysteresis has been carefully checked, and it was found that the
stable hysteresis loop can be more readily obtained when using the SAB model
compared to that using the Wajnflasz-Pick model. Using realistic parameters
estimated based on first-principles calculations of a specific polymeric
coordination SCO compound, [Fe(pz)Pt(CN)]2HO,
temperature-induced hysteresis and pressure effects on SCO phenomena are
simulated successfully.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Optical isolation with nonlinear topological photonics
It is shown that the concept of topological phase transitions can be used to
design nonlinear photonic structures exhibiting power thresholds and
discontinuities in their transmittance. This provides a novel route to devising
nonlinear optical isolators. We study three representative designs: (i) a
waveguide array implementing a nonlinear 1D Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) model,
(ii) a waveguide array implementing a nonlinear 2D Haldane model, and (iii) a
2D lattice of coupled-ring waveguides. In the first two cases, we find a
correspondence between the topological transition of the underlying linear
lattice and the power threshold of the transmittance, and show that the
transmission behavior is attributable to the emergence of a self-induced
topological soliton. In the third case, we show that the topological transition
produces a discontinuity in the transmittance curve, which can be exploited to
achieve sharp jumps in the power-dependent isolation ratio.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Ultrafast and octave-spanning optical nonlinearities from strongly phase-mismatched cascaded interactions
Cascaded nonlinearities have attracted much interest, but ultrafast
applications have been seriously hampered by the simultaneous requirements of
being near phase-matching and having ultrafast femtosecond response times. Here
we show that in strongly phase-mismatched nonlinear frequency conversion
crystals the pump pulse can experience a large and extremely broadband
self-defocusing cascaded Kerr-like nonlinearity. The large cascaded
nonlinearity is ensured through interaction with the largest quadratic tensor
element in the crystal, and the strong phase-mismatch ensures an ultrafast
nonlinear response with an octave-spanning bandwidth. We verify this
experimentally by showing few-cycle soliton compression with noncritical
cascaded second-harmonic generation: Energetic 47 fs infrared pulses are
compressed in a just 1-mm long bulk lithium niobate crystal to 17 fs (under 4
optical cycles) with 80% efficiency, and upon further propagation an
octave-spanning supercontinuum is observed. Such ultrafast cascading is
expected to occur for a broad range of pump wavelengths spanning the near- and
mid-IR using standard nonlinear crystals.Comment: resubmitted, revised version, accepted for Phys. Rev. Let
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