Ionic contributions to the Raman tensor of insulators
- 15 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 35 (17) , 9278-9283
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.35.9278
Abstract
Earlier authors have pointed out that at infrared frequencies, ionic contributions to the nonlinear optical susceptibilities of crystals can become important. Of particular interest is their frequency variation, which may exhibit resonances when the frequency of one or more optical beams coincides with that of an optical phonon. We present a simple theory of the nonlinear optical response of insulators in the infrared region which incorporates both the electronic and ionic contributions to the Raman tensor. The method is easily extended to the discussion of other nonlinear mixing or harmonic-generation processes in the infrared region. Primary application is to crystals of the zinc-blende structure, and the processes examined explicitly are the generation of optical phonons by resonances with the difference frequency of two infrared waves mixed in the crystal, and the ionic Raman effect.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Far-infrared nonlinear optics. I.near ionic resonancePhysical Review B, 1986
- Far-infrared nonlinear optics. II.contributions from the dynamics of free carriers in semiconductorsPhysical Review B, 1986
- Ionic Raman Scattering and Ionic Frequency MixingPhysica Status Solidi (b), 1974
- Ionic Raman Effect. III. First- and Second-Order Ionic Raman EffectsPhysical Review B, 1972
- Infrared Dispersion of Second-Order Electric Susceptibilities in Semiconducting CompoundsPhysical Review B, 1972
- Ionic Raman Effect. II. The First-Order Ionic Raman EffectPhysical Review B, 1971
- Ionic Raman Effect. I. Scattering by Localized Vibration ModesPhysical Review B, 1970
- Nonlinear optics, anharmonic oscillators, and pyroelectricityIEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, 1968
- Theory of Lattice Raman Scattering in InsulatorsPhysical Review B, 1967
- The Raman effect in crystalsAdvances in Physics, 1964