Turchanin research lab
watermark — a wave that decreases in amplitude and wavelength after passing through an area of points

Area B

Research in Project Area B is focused on the investigation of nonlinear optics in atomically thin two-dimen­sional structures.
Turchanin research lab
Image: Jens Meyer (University of Jena)

B – Nonlinear optics of atomically thin 2D systems

Research in Project Area B is focused on the investigation of nonlinear optics in atomically thin two-dimen­sional structures. Thereby, Project Area B covers the full structural diversity of two-dimensional materials ranging from novel crystalline structures, such as metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs), to amorphous films, e.g. as provided by atomic layer deposition. Project Area B projects will examine optically induced carrier and excitation dynamics through and along these very different two-dimensional structures and will identify the impact on the nonlinear optical properties of this novel material system. Central questions to be addressed deal with identifying the structural measures needed to increase or modify and tailor quadratic, possibly even higher-order nonlinearities of these (functional­ized) two-dimensional structures. In addition, two-dimensional structures will be functionalized, e.g., by applying resonant structures, by insert­ing ultrathin gaps between metallic walls, or by stacking bi- or multilayers, by chemical functionalization with molecules, or by inserting point defects, thereby naturally bridging the gap to research area C.

Project B
Project B
Image: Katrin Uhling/Leibniz-IPHT

View all B - Projects

Day of Physics at the Institute of Optics and Quantum Electronics  in 2017.
Laboratory work on optically exciting an 2D material at the Abbe Center of Photonics, 2018.
Frequency conversion in a nonlinear optical crystal.
Lab work at the Institute of Applied Physics, 2018.
Experimental laser setup for the characterization of 2D heterostructures.
Nonlinear fiber loop