Abstract
The study of (buried) interfacial monolayers has greatly benefitted from the development of the interface specific nonlinear optical techniques known as IR-visible sum-frequency generation. In particular the ability to probe individual vibrational resonances of the constituent molecules of the monolayer has proven to be extremely valuable. For such studies one often uses a tunable IR source whose bandwidth is narrow compared to the width of the vibrational bands.
© 1996 IEEE
PDF ArticleMore Like This
E.W.M. van der Ham, Q.H.F. Vrehen, E.R. Eliel, R. Braun, B.D. Casson, and C. Bain
CWG2 The European Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO/Europe) 1996
E. R. Eliel, E. W. M. van der Ham, Q. H. F. Vrehen, R. Braun, B. D. Casson, and C. D. Bain
CMC7 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO:S&I) 1996
Q. Du, E. Freysz, R. Superfine, and Y. R. Shen
QWA1 Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference (CLEO:FS) 1993