Abstract

One-, two-, and three-photon absorption induced fluorescence intensities of a novel nonlinear optical chromophore have been measured by using a tunable femtosecond pulsed laser as the excitation. Four resonance peaks are observed as the excitation wavelength is tuned from 600 to 2000 nm. These peaks correspond to the one-, two- and three-photon fluorescence resonance. Except for intensity difference, the lifetime and the fluorescence spectrum are found to be the same for the one-, two-, or three-photon resonance, hence suggesting that the same excited energy level is involved in emitting the fluorescence intensity. A three-level model is developed to account for the incident excitation laser intensity dependence of the one-photon and multiphoton fluorescence intensity. The model allows the multiphoton absorption cross sections to be extracted; it can also account for the deviation observed in the linear, square, and cubic intensity dependence of the one-, two-, and three-photon fluorescence intensity, respectively. To determine the absorption cross sections, the present method does not require the fluorescence quantum efficiency data, needed in the low intensity technique.

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