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Multifunctional Oxazolone Derivative as an Optical Amplifier, Generator, and Modulator
Author(s) -
Adam Szukalski,
Przemysław Krawczyk,
B. Sahraoui,
Beata Jędrzejewska
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c08056
Subject(s) - lasing threshold , optoelectronics , optical amplifier , signal (programming language) , optical transistor , optical switch , optical modulation amplitude , photonics , materials science , amplifier , modulation (music) , optics , optical communication , multi mode optical fiber , optical fiber , physics , computer science , laser , cmos , transistor , voltage , wavelength , quantum mechanics , acoustics , programming language
An optical control of many working optoelectronic systems (real-time sensors, optical modulators, light amplifiers, or phase retarders) giving efficient optical gain or remote signal modulation is currently included as scientifically and industrially interesting. In here, an oxazolone derivative as the multifunctional organic system is given in this contribution. The molecule possesses a stilbene group and an oxazolone heteroatomic ring, which implies effective refractive index manipulation and multimode lasing action, respectively. The light modulation is repeatable and stable, also in the hundreds of Hz regime. On the other hand, the amplified optical signal can be easily generated by an external optical pumping source. Thus, signal control is fully available, as is read-in and read-out of the information in real time. Furthermore, this third-order, nonlinear, optical phenomenon using a third harmonic generation technique was also observed. We discovered that only by changing the energy and time regime of the supplied optical signal is the optical or nonlinear optical response observed. Two heteroenergetic molecular states ( trans ( E ) and cis ( Z )) can efficiently operate in modern multifunctional optoelectronic systems, which can provide and generate an optical signal. Such functionalities are commonly used in all-optical photonic switchers and logic gates and can be utilized in optical-core networks and computers.

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