The
interfacial region of aqueous systems also known as the electrical
double layer can be characterized on the molecular level with second
harmonic and sum-frequency generation (SHG/SFG). SHG and SFG are surface
specific methods for isotropic liquids. Here, we model the SHG/SFG
intensity in reflection, transmission, and scattering geometry taking
into account the spatial variation of all fields. We show that, in
the presence of a surface electrostatic field, interference effects,
which originate from oriented water molecules on a length scale over
which the potential decays, can strongly modify the probing depth
as well as the expected intensity at ionic strengths –3 M. For reflection experiments this interference phenomenon leads
to a significant reduction of the SHG/SFG intensity. Transmission
mode experiments from aqueous interfaces are hardly influenced. For
SHG/SFG scattering experiments the same interference leads to an increase
in intensity and to modified scattering patterns. The predicted scattering
patterns are verified experimentally