Excited State Absorption Drives Low-Energy Optical Limiting in Oligothiophenes
Mustapha Driouech, Michele Guerrini, Caterina Cocchi

TL;DR
This study uses real-time density-functional theory to show that excited-state absorption causes low-energy optical limiting in oligothiophenes, informing the design of better nonlinear optical materials.
Contribution
It demonstrates that excited-state absorption is the key mechanism for optical limiting in oligothiophenes, providing new insights for designing advanced organic semiconductors.
Findings
Absorption cross section increases significantly under strong fields.
Saturation behavior indicates optical limiting via ESA.
Excited-state absorption drives low-energy optical limiting.
Abstract
Optical limiting (OL), a crucial mechanism for protecting human eyes and sensitive sensors from intense radiation, relies on understanding the optical nonlinearities acting on the systems. Assessing and disentangling the effects at play is crucial to predict and control the nonlinear optical response in real materials. In this ab initio study based on real-time time-dependent density-functional theory, we investigate non-perturbatively the absorption spectra of a set of thiophene oligomers, the building blocks of technologically relevant organic semiconductors, excited by broadband radiation of increasing intensity. Under strong electric fields, the absorption cross section grows significantly below the onset of linear excitations, exhibiting saturation typical of OL. By exciting the oligothiophenes with a train of pulses targeting the first and second excited states of each moiety and…
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