Tunable Nonlinearity and Efficient Harmonic Generation from a Strongly Coupled Light-Matter System
Davis M. Welakuh, Prineha Narang

TL;DR
This paper investigates how strong light-matter coupling enhances nonlinear optical processes like harmonic generation, showing that the enhancement stems from modifications in nonlinear susceptibilities and can be tuned by coupling strength.
Contribution
It introduces a first-principles framework to analyze harmonic generation in strongly coupled systems and clarifies the physical origins of nonlinear enhancement.
Findings
Nonlinear conversion efficiency is enhanced by polaritonic resonances.
Efficiency can be tuned by increasing light-matter coupling strength.
A new method computes harmonic spectra from the displacement field.
Abstract
Strong light-matter coupling within electromagnetic environments provides a promising path to modify and control chemical and physical processes. The origin of the enhancement of nonlinear optical processes such as second-harmonic and third-harmonic generation (SHG and THG) due to strong light-matter coupling is attributed to distinct physical effects which questions the relevance of strong coupling in these processes. In this work, we leverage a first-principles approach to investigate the origins of the experimentally observed enhancement of resonant SHG and THG under strong light-matter coupling. We find that the enhancement of the nonlinear conversion efficiency has its origins in a modification of the associated nonlinear optical susceptibilities as polaritonic resonances emerge in the nonlinear spectrum. Further, we find that the nonlinear conversion efficiency can be tuned by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStrong Light-Matter Interactions · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Thermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies
