Quantitative Nonlinear Optical Polarimetry with High Spatial Resolution
Albert Suceava, Sankalpa Hazra, Jadupati Nag, John Hayden, Safdar Imam, Zhiwen Liu, Abishek Iyer, Mercouri Kanatzidis, Susan Trolier-McKinstry, Jon-Paul Maria, Venkatraman Gopalan

TL;DR
This paper presents a method for quantitative nonlinear optical polarimetry using high-NA focusing in microscopy, enabling detailed analysis of materials' symmetry and out-of-plane responses with high spatial resolution.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analytical approach for SHG polarimetry under high-NA focusing, including solutions to the inverse problem for unknown tensor coefficients.
Findings
Good agreement between experiments and simulations for various samples
Successful extraction of out-of-plane nonlinear polarization components
Demonstration of high-resolution polarimetry for 2D materials and thin films
Abstract
Nonlinear optical microscopy such as in the optical second-harmonic generation (SHG) modality has become a popular tool today for probing materials in the physical and biological sciences. While imaging and spectroscopy are widely used in the microscopy mode, nonlinear polarimetry, which can shed light on materials' symmetry and microstructure, is relatively underdeveloped. This is partly because quantitative analytical modeling of the optical SHG response for anisotropic crystals and films largely assumes low-numerical aperture (NA) focusing of light, where the plane-wave approximation is sufficient. Tight focusing provides unique benefits in revealing out-of-plane polarization responses, which cannot be detected by near-plane-wave illumination at normal incidence. Here, we outline a method for quantitatively analyzing SHG polarimetry measurements obtained under high-NA focusing within…
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