Abstract

We report strong second-harmonic generation (SHG) from 2H polytype of multilayer Tin diselenide (SnSe2) for fundamental excitation close to the indirect band-edge in the absence of excitonic resonances. Comparison of SHG and Raman spectra from exfoliated SnSe2 flakes of different polytypes shows strong (negligible) SHG and Raman Eg mode at 109 cm−1 (119 cm−1), consistent with 2H (1T) polytypes. The difference between the A1g–Eg Raman peak positions is found to exhibit significant thickness dependent for the 1T form, which is found to be absent for the 2H form. The observed thickness dependence of SHG with rapid oscillations in signal strength for small changes in flake thickness are in good agreement with a nonlinear wave propagation model considering nonlinear polarization with alternating sign from each monolayer. The nonlinear optical susceptibility extracted from SHG signal comparison with standard quartz samples for 1040 nm excitation is found to be more than 4-times higher than that at 1550 nm. This enhanced nonlinear response at 1040 nm is attributed to the enhanced nonlinear optical response for fundamental excitation close to the indirect band-edge. We also study SHG from heterostructures of monolayer MoS2/multilayer SnSe2 which allows us to unambiguously compare the nonlinear optical response of SnSe2 with MoS2. We find the SHG signal and any interference effect in the overlap region to be dominated by the SnSe2 layer for the excitation wavelengths considered. The comparison of SHG from SnSe2 and MoS2 underscores that the choice of the 2D material for a particular nonlinear optical application is contextual on the wavelength range of interest and its optical properties at those wavelengths. The present works further highlights the usefulness of near band-edge enhancement of nonlinear processes in emerging 2D materials towards realizing useful nanophotonic devices.

Highlights

  • We report strong second-harmonic generation (SHG) from 2H polytype of multilayer Tin diselenide ­(SnSe2) for fundamental excitation close to the indirect band-edge in the absence of excitonic resonances

  • The observed difference in SHG signal strength between the two samples is consistent with the centrosymmetric 1T polytype exhibiting negligible SHG in comparison to the non-centrosymmetric 2H polytype exhibiting strong SHG for odd number of layers

  • For the first time to the best of our knowledge, SHG from multilayer 2H polytype of S­ nSe2 and observe strong second-order nonlinear optical response for fundamental excitation in the vicinity of the indirect band-edge

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Summary

Introduction

We report strong second-harmonic generation (SHG) from 2H polytype of multilayer Tin diselenide ­(SnSe2) for fundamental excitation close to the indirect band-edge in the absence of excitonic resonances. Monolayer and multilayer 2D materials exhibit strong nonlinear optical response owing to their highly ordered crystalline structure, interesting layer number, polarization ­dependence[3], and offer the possibility of incorporating electrical t­unability[4,5] These properties have led to 2D materials being proposed for use as ultra-thin active photonic devices for wavelength conversion, saturable absorption, optical limiting, optical modulation, parametric down-conversion etc.[1] Second-harmonic generation (SHG) is one such nonlinear wavelength-conversion process in which high intensity laser illumination at the fundamental excitation is up-converted to twice the input frequency. The second-order nonlinear optical susceptibility at 1040 nm (1.19 eV) excitation is found to be more than 4-times higher than that at 1550 nm (0.8 eV) excitation for S­ nSe2, which has an indirect band gap in the range of 1.07–1.59 eV This is attributed to the enhancement of SHG for fundamental excitation in close vicinity of the indirect band-edge. The present work underscores the usefulness of near band-edge enhancement of nonlinear optical processes in emerging 2D materials, such as S­ nSe2 with potential applications in realizing ultra-thin nonlinear optical devices

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