Abstract
Impulsive orientation of symmetric-top molecules excited by two-color femtosecond pulses is considered. In addition to the well-known transient orientation appearing immediately after the pulse and then reemerging periodically due to quantum revivals, we report the phenomenon of field-free long-lasting orientation. Long-lasting means that the time averaged orientation remains non-zero until destroyed by other physical effects, e.g., intermolecular collisions. The effect is caused by the combined action of the field-polarizability and field-hyperpolarizability interactions. The dependence of degree of long-lasting orientation on temperature and pulse parameters is considered. The effect can be measured by means of second (or higher-order) harmonic generation, and may be used to control the deflection of molecules traveling through inhomogeneous electrostatic fields.
1 Introduction
Over the years, diverse optical methods have been developed to align and orient molecules of varying complexity and many applications related to studies of molecular and photon-induced processes are based on the ability to control the absolute orientation of the molecules. For reviews, see [1–6].
There are several laser-based strategies for achieving molecular orientation in the gas phase, including using a combination of intense non-resonant laser and weak electrostatic fields [7–15], and using strong single-cycle terahertz (THz) pulses [16–23], alone or together with optical pulses [24–26]. In addition, laser and THz pulses with twisted polarization were shown to be effective for inducing enantioselective orientation of chiral molecules [27–33].
The techniques listed above rely on the laser-dipole and/or laser-polarizability interactions. Another route to molecular orientation stems from higher-order laser-molecule interactions, e.g., the laser field-hyperpolarizability interaction. Non-resonant phase-locked two-color laser pulses consisting of the fundamental wave (FW) and its second harmonic (SH) were used for inducing molecular orientation by interacting with the molecular hyperpolarizability [34–49].
Here, we investigate the orientation dynamics of symmetric-top molecules excited by single two-color femtosecond laser pulses. In addition to the well-known transient orientation appearing immediately as a response to the laser excitation, we predict the existence of long-lasting orientation. Long-lasting means that the time-averaged orientation remains non-zero, within the model, indefinitely or until destroyed by additional physical effects, e.g., by collisions. The long-lasting orientation induced by a two-color pulse has an intricate dependence on both the molecular polarizability and hyperpolarizability. Related effects have been recently observed in chiral molecules excited by one-color laser pulses with twisted polarization [30, 32] and investigated in non-linear molecules excited by THz pulses [23, 33].
The paper is organized as follows. In the next section, we describe our numerical approaches for simulating the laser-driven molecular rotational dynamics. In Section 3, we present the long-lasting orientation, which is the main result of this work. Section 4 is devoted to a qualitative analysis of the effect, and a derivation of the approximate classical formula for the degree of long-lasting orientation. Additional results are presented in Section 5.
2 Numerical Methods
In this work, the rotational dynamics of symmetric-top molecules is treated within the rigid rotor approximation. We performed both classical and quantum mechanical simulations of molecular rotation driven by two-color laser fields. This section outlines the theoretical approaches used in both cases.
2.1 Classical Simulation
In the classical limit, the rotational dynamics of a single rigid top is described by Euler’s equations [50]where is the moment of inertia tensor, is the angular velocity, and is the external torque resulting from the interaction between field-induced dipole moment and the electric field. All the quantities in Eq. 1 are expressed in the rotating molecular frame of reference, equipped with a basis set including the three principal axes of inertia, a, b, and c.
In the laboratory frame of reference, the electric field of a two-color laser pulse is defined bywhere the two terms correspond to the FW and its SH, respectively. ω is the carrier frequency of the FW field, φ is the relative phase of the second harmonic, is the field’s envelope with as the peak amplitude, and is the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the laser pulse intensity profile. The polarization direction of the SH field is given by , where is its angle with respect to the Z axis, and are the unit vectors along laboratory Z and X axes, respectively. The electric field in the molecular frame of reference can be expressed aswhere and are the unit vectors expressed in the molecular frame of reference. Q is a time-dependent orthogonal matrix relating the laboratory and the molecular frames of reference. It is parametrized by a quaternion, q which has an equation of motion , with being a pure quaternion [51, 52]. Considering laser-polarizability and laser-hyperpolarizabiltiy interactions, the torque induced by a two-color field has two contributions , where [53]Here, the overline represents averaging over the optical cycle, and are the polarizability and hyperpolarizability tensors, respectively. is the Levi-Civita symbol, is a component of the hyperpolarizability tensor, and are the components of the FW and SH fields, respectively.
To simulate the behavior of an ensemble of non-interacting molecules, we use the Monte Carlo approach. For each molecule, the Euler’s equations [Eq. 1] with the torques in Eqs. 4, 5 are solved numerically using the standard fourth order Runge-Kutta algorithm. In the simulations we used ensembles consisting of molecules. The initial uniform random quaternions, representing isotropically distributed molecules, were generated using the recipe from [54]. Initial angular velocities are distributed according to the Boltzmann distribution,where , T is the temperature and is the Boltzmann constant.
2.2 Quantum Simulation
The Hamiltonian describing the rotational degrees of freedom of a molecule and the molecular polarizability and hyperpolarizability couplings to external time-dependent fields can be written as , where is the field-free Hamiltonian [55], and is the molecule-field interaction potential, with two contributions , where [56]Here , , and are the components of the field vector, polarizability tensor , and hyperpolarizability tensor , respectively. Since the optical carrier frequency of the laser fields, ω [see Eq. 2], is several orders of magnitude larger than a typical rotational frequency of small molecules, the energy contribution due to the interaction with the molecular permanent dipole, , is negligible.
We use the eigenstates of , , describing the field-free motion of quantum symmetric-top [55], as the basis set in our numerical simulations. The three quantum numbers are J, K and M, where J is the total angular momentum, while K and M are its projections on the molecular a axis and the laboratory-fixed Z axis, respectively. The time-dependent Schrödinger equation is solved by numerical exponentiation of the Hamiltonian matrix (see Expokit [57]) with the initial state being one of the field-free eigenstates, . The degree of molecular orientation is derived by calculating the induced polarization, the expectation value of the dipole projection. The polarization along each of the axes in the laboratory-fixed frame of reference is given by where represents one of the unit vectors . Thermal effects are accounted for by computing the incoherent average of the time-dependent polarizations obtained for the various initial states . The relative weight of each of the projections is defined by the Boltzmann distribution,where is the partition function, and is the energy/eigenvalue corresponding to state. For molecules with two or more identical atoms, an additional statistical factor must be included in the distribution [58]. For the case of methyl fluoride () molecule considered in this work, is given bywhere .
In our simulations, the basis set included all the states with . For our sample molecule, , at initial temperature of , this means that initial states with were included. Additional details about the numerical simulations, including the matrix elements of the interaction Hamiltonian , can be found in Supplementary Appendix A.
3 Long-Lasting Orientation
We continue to consider the methyl fluoride (), as an example for a symmetric-top molecule. The molecule is excited by a two-color pulse in which the polarizations of the FW and SH are parallel and along Z axis [, see Eq. 2]. In addition, here we set the relative phase between them to be zero (). Later on we discuss what changes when this phase changes. Table 1 summarizes the molecular properties of . Moments of inertia, dipole moment, and polarizability tensor components are taken from NIST, where they were computed within the density functional theory (DFT, method CAM-B3LYP/aug-cc-pVTZ) [59]. The hyperpolarizability values are literature values taken from [60].
TABLE 1
| Moments of inertia | Dipole components | Polarizability components | Hyperpolarizability components |
|---|---|---|---|
Molecular properties (in atomic units) of : moments of inertia, nonzero elements of dipole moment, polarizability tensor, and hyperpolarizability tensor. All the quantities are represented in the reference frame of molecular principal axes of inertia.
Figure 1 shows the projection of the dipole moment along the laboratory Z axis, , calculated classically and quantum mechanically (see Methods Section 2). In the classical case, the angle brackets denote ensemble average, that is the average of the dipole projections of molecules, initially isotropically distributed in space and having random angular velocities [see Eq. 6]. In the quantum case, denotes incoherent average of initially populated rotational states [see Eq. 9]. Note that the averages and are zero. Here, the initial temperature is , the peak intensities of the FW and SH fields are and , respectively, and the duration (FWHM) of the pulses are [see Eq. 2]. On the short time scale (first ), the classical and quantum results are in remarkable agreement, and show the expected immediate response to a kick by a two-color pulse. On the long time scale, the quantum mechanical simulation exhibits distinct quantum revivals of the orientation [61–65]. This transient orientation effect is well studied and was observed in the past [34–49].
FIGURE 1
In the case of symmetric-top molecules considered here, we observe long-lasting (persistent) orientation, a previously unreported phenomenon in two-color orientation schemes. The inset in Figure 1 demonstrates that after the initial oscillations are washed out, the classical polarization/degree of orientation attains a constant, nonzero value. In the quantum case too, despite its being partially masked by the revivals, the sliding time average of the signal is approximately constant and it persists indefinitely within the adopted model. This long-lasting orientation is one of the main results of this work.
Several comments are in order. Additional physical effects can distort the long-term field-free picture of identical periodically appearing revivals seen in Figure 1. These include the centrifugal distortion and the radiation emission due to rapidly rotating molecular permanent dipole moment. Dephasing of the rotational states caused by the centrifugal distortion leads to the eventual decay of the revivals’ peaks [21, 22]. Nevertheless, the average dipole remains almost unchanged (see [23]). The radiative emission results in the gradual decrease of the rotational energy [21, 22]. However, for a rarefied molecular gas, the estimated relative energy loss during a single revival is very small. The proper description of the behavior on an even longer timescale (nanoseconds), requires the inclusion of collisions and fine structure effects [66, 67], which is beyond the scope of the current work. Furthermore, it should be noted that higher laser pulse intensities lead to higher degree of orientation, but when the intensity is high enough for molecular ionization, another effect kicks in, namely orientation mechanism due to selective molecular ionization of molecules with specific orientation [43, 44]. Considering this kind of orientation is also beyond the scope of this work.
4 Long-Lasting Orientation - A Qualitative Description
An explicit form of the interaction potential [Eq. 7] can be obtained by expressing the electric field vector in the rotating molecular frame of reference. For the sake of the current discussion, this can be done conveniently by using an orthogonal rotation matrix parameterized by the three Euler angles, . We use the definition convention adopted in [55], according to which, ϕ and θ are the standard azimuth and polar angles defining the orientation of the molecular frame z axis, and χ is the additional rotation angle about z axis. The basis set in the rotating molecular frame of reference consists of the three principal axes of inertia, . For molecules belonging to the symmetry group (such as ), there are three non-zero polarizability components (two of them are equal), and 11 non-zero hyperpolarizability components (three of which are independent) [68]. For definiteness, we associate the axis of the three-fold rotational symmetry with the most polarizable molecular principal axis a (z axis in the rotating frame), having the smallest moment of inertia, . In this case, the non-zero polarizability elements are , and the independent hyperpolarizability elements are , , . The other non-zero hyperpolarizability elements are obtained by permuting the indices of the independent elements [68]. The parameters of the molecule are listed in Table 1.
We consider the case of a two-color pulse in which both the FW and SH are polarized along Z axis. The interaction potential is obtained by carrying out the summation in Eq. 7 (where all the quantities are expressed in the basis of principal axes of inertia) and we average over the optical cycle. The resulting potential has two contributions,To facilitate the qualitative discussion in this section, we let . These elements of the hyperpolarizability tensor are the smallest (see Table 1), and their omission does not affect the qualitative features of the discussed phenomena. Thus, the hyperpolarizability interaction becomesAnd is a function of a single variable θ—the polar angle between the symmetry axis of the molecule (a axis) and the laboratory Z axis (axis of laser polarization).
The two parts of the interaction potential lead to two distinct effects. is a symmetric function of θ (about ), and a kick by such a potential results in molecular alignment (for reviews, see [1–6]). The second part, is an asymmetric function of θ, causing molecular orientation. Transient orientation of linear molecules excited by two-color laser pulses has been observed [38–40, 42, 44] and is being studied theoretically [45–49]. Figure 2 shows the angular dependence of , , see Eq. 13. The orienting potential is proportional to , such that the orientation is zero for . Also, the relative phase can be used to control the orientation direction. To simplify the following expressions, we set .
FIGURE 2
4.1 Approximate Classical Formula
In the case of weak excitation, we can derive an approximate classical formula for the degree of long-lasting orientation. Since the long-lasting orientation manifests itself under field-free conditions, we begin by considering the free motion of a single classical symmetric top. The free motion of the unit vector , pointing along the rotational symmetry axis of the molecule, is given by a simple vectorial differential equation . Here, is the conserved angular momentum vector, I is the moment of inertia along the orthogonal axes b and c. The solution of this equation is given bywhere L is the magnitude of angular momentum and is vector at . The above equation describes precession of around at a rate (see Figure 3). In the special case of a linear molecule, , so that Eq. 14 reduces toEquation 15 describes a uniform rotation of in a plane perpendicular to the angular momentum vector .
FIGURE 3
The degree of long-lasting orientation (see the inset of Figure 1) can be obtained by considering the ensemble average projection of the molecular axis on the laboratory Z axis, , and then evaluating its time average where defines the end of the two-color pulse (when the free motion begins). Note that for the molecular dipole, points along (see Table 1). Next, we exchange the order of the ensemble and time averaging. The time average of is obtained from Eq. 14 and it readswhere , , and subindex f denotes that all the quantities are taken after the pulse. With the potential in Eqs. 11, 13, both ϕ and χ are cyclic coordinates. Therefore, the canonically conjugate angular momenta and are conserved. As a consequence, Eq. 17 becomeswhere and are taken before the pulse. At this stage, we can conclude that the long-lasting orientation is strictly zero when the initial temperature is zero and/or in the limit of a linear rotor. In the first case, , while in the second case , because for linear molecules.
For the ensemble averaging, it is advantageous to express all the quantities in the basis of principal axes of inertia. The magnitude of the angular momentum after the pulse, , is given bywhere are the values before the pulse, while and are the changes in angular momentum components due to laser excitation. Explicit expressions for and can be obtained using the impulsive approximation. In this approximation, we assume that the duration of the two-color pulse is much shorter than the typical period of molecular rotation, such that the molecular orientation remains unchanged during the pulse. Using this approximation and the Euler-Lagrange equations, we derive the explicit expressions for and (the details are summarized in Supplementary Appendix B),whereandHere , , and are the peak amplitudes of the FW and SH, respectively. is expressed in terms of the molecular frame components using the rotation matrix , such thatFinally, we carry out the ensemble averagewhere is the partition function. To simplify the integral, we assume that [see Eqs. 19–21] and expand in powers of [see Eq. 22]. Only terms proportional to even powers of contribute to the integral. We consider the first non-vanishing term proportional to , such that [see Supplementary Equation S26]where , and is a monotonic function of . In the limit of a linear molecule (), [see Supplementary Equation S27 and Figure S1].
For the polarizability interaction alone, , and . For the hyperpolarizability interaction alone, which is a symmetric function (about ), and therefore for all n. Only when both polarizability and hyperpolarizability interactions are included, . In this case,where and are given by Eqs. 23, 24, and is given by Supplementary Equation S27. The details of the derivation of Eq. 28 are summarized in Supplementary Appendix C.
According to Eq. 28, the degree of long-lasting orientation scales as . In Figure 4, we compare the temperature (panel A) and pulse duration (panel B) dependencies of the long-lasting orientation obtained using the approximate formula in Eq. 28 with the numerical results obtained by evaluating the formula in Eq. 18 using the Monte Carlo approach as described in the Methods Section 2 (using the impulsive approximation, see Supplementary Appendix B).
FIGURE 4
There is a good agreement between the numerical results and the results obtained using the approximate formula, especially at higher temperatures (higher initial angular momenta), where the assumption is well satisfied. The pulse duration dependence shows the connection to the energy gained by the molecule from the laser pulse. In the limit of weak excitation (low pulse intensity and/or high temperature), the approximate formula also reveals the more involved dependence on the fields’ amplitudes, according to Eqs. 23, 24.
The hyperpolarizability part of the interaction potential, [see Eq. 13], is an asymmetric function of θ (about , see Figure 2), similar to the orienting potential, which is proportional to , due to a single THz pulse interacting with the molecular dipole, . As we show here and as it was shown in [23], excitation by such orienting potentials results in transient orientation followed by residual long-lasting orientation.
Despite the similarity, the mechanisms behind the long-lasting orientation induced by a femtosecond two-color and a picosecond THz pulse are not the same. It was shown in [23] that in the limit of vanishing THz pulse duration, the induced long-lasting orientation tends to zero. In other words, a δ-kick by a purely orienting potential doesn’t lead to long-lasting orientation. In contrast, here we show that a δ-kick by a combined, aligning and orienting, potentials results in a long-lasting orientation [see the discussion under Eq. 27, also see Figure 5].
FIGURE 5
5 Temperature and Polarization Dependence of the Long-Lasting Orientation
Figure 5 depicts the long-lasting orientation of the dipole moment as a function of temperature for the case of collinearly polarized two-color pulse. Due to the short pulse duration (), the results of the fully time-dependent simulation (solid blue line) are well reproduced using the impulsive approximation (dashed red line). The impulsive approximation is described in Supplementary Appendix B. As mentioned in Section 4, the long-lasting orientation vanishes at , (see Eq. 18). At high temperatures, the long-lasting orientation decreases as . Therefore, there should be an optimal temperature for which the long-lasting orientation is maximal. As is shown in Figure 5, for the field parameters used here, the optimal temperature is . In the derivation leading to the approximate formula in Eq. 28, we assumed . Nevertheless, the results obtained using Eq. 28 qualitatively agree with the numerical results at higher temperatures as well (dotted green line).
As an additional example, we consider the case of a cross-polarized two-color pulse in which the polarizations of the FW and SH are along Z and X axes, respectively. Figure 6 shows the dipole signal along the laboratory X axis. Note that the Y and Z-projections of the dipole moment, are exactly zero. In this case, a similar transient dipole response along the polarization direction of SH can be seen. On the long time scale, it is followed by the long-lasting orientation. Notice that for the field parameters used here, the achieved degree of both transient and long-lasting orientation is higher in the case of cross-polarized FW and SH compared with Figure 1 (also see [46]).
FIGURE 6
6 Conclusion
We have theoretically demonstrated a new phenomenon of long-lasting (persistent) orientation of symmetric-top molecules excited by a single two-color femtosecond pulse. The residual orientation was shown to last indefinitely (within the adopted model), or until destroyed by other physical effects, e.g., intermolecular collisions. We derived an approximate classical expression revealing several qualitative features of the phenomenon, including the scaling with temperature, pulse duration, and other field and molecular parameters. The predictions of the formula are in full agreement with the results of numerical simulations in the limit of weak excitation. A quick check for different polarizations showed that in the case of cross-polarized FW and SH, the achieved degree of both transient and long-lasting orientation may be higher than in the case of parallel configuration. The magnitude of the long-lasting dipole signal shown in this work is about Debye, corresponding to a degree of molecular orientation of about 0.5%. This value is similar to typical experimental values observed by means of the Coulomb explosion technique, which is of the order of 0.1%, e.g., see [32, 44]. Further and careful optimization of the parameters of the two-color pulse may give rise to even higher degrees of long-lasting orientation. Moreover, it has been demonstrated before that the degree of molecular alignment/orientation can be enhanced when a sequence of several laser pulses is used instead of a single pulse [17, 69–74], and a similar approach may be beneficial for increasing the degree of the long-lasting orientation. The orientation may be measured with the help of second (or higher-order) harmonic generation [42]. In addition, the long-lasting orientation may be utilized in deflection experiments using inhomogeneous electrostatic fields [75–77], where the deflection angle of a molecular beam in a static electric field depends on the time-averaged directional cosine, . Therefore, although small compared to the peak value of the transient orientation, the long-lasting orientation may have a significant, observable effect on the deflection angle.
Statements
Data availability statement
The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.
Author contributions
All the authors participated in formulating the problem and initiating this study. LX and IT equally contributed to the calculations and numerical simulations. All the authors participated in analyzing the results and writing the manuscript. YP and IA supervised and guided the work.
Funding
We gratefully acknowledge support by the Israel Science Foundation (Grant No. 746/15). IA acknowledges support as the Patricia Elman Bildner Professorial Chair. This research was made possible in part by the historic generosity of the Harold Perlman Family.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Supplementary material
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphy.2021.689635/full#supplementary-material
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Summary
Keywords
long-lasting orientation, symmetric-top, two-color laser pulses, polarizability interaction, hyperpolarizability interaction
Citation
Xu L, Tutunnikov I, Prior Y and Averbukh IS (2021) Long-Lasting Orientation of Symmetric-Top Molecules Excited by Two-Color Femtosecond Pulses. Front. Phys. 9:689635. doi: 10.3389/fphy.2021.689635
Received
01 April 2021
Accepted
18 June 2021
Published
16 July 2021
Volume
9 - 2021
Edited by
Robert Gordon, University of Illinois at Chicago, United States
Reviewed by
Henrik Stapelfeldt, Aarhus University, Denmark
Monika Leibscher, University of Kassel, Germany
Updates
Copyright
© 2021 Xu, Tutunnikov, Prior and Averbukh.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Long Xu, long.xu@weizmann.ac.il; Ilia Tutunnikov, ilia.tutunnikov@weizmann.ac.il; Yehiam Prior, yehiam.prior@weizmann.ac.il; Ilya Sh. Averbukh, ilya.averbukh@weizmann.ac.il
†These authors have contributed equally to this work
This article was submitted to Physical Chemistry and Chemical Physics, a section of the journal Frontiers in Physics
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