Sum frequency generation spectroscopy (SFG) is a nonlinear laser spectroscopy technique used to analyze surfaces and interfaces. It can be expressed as a sum of a series of
Lorentz oscillators. In a typical SFG setup, two laser beams
mix
Mix, mixes or mixing may refer to:
Persons & places
* Mix (surname)
** Tom Mix (1880-1940), American film star
* nickname of Mix Diskerud (born Mikkel, 1990), Norwegian-American soccer player
* Mix camp, an informal settlement in Namibia
* Mix ...
at an interface and generate an output beam with a frequency equal to the sum of the two input frequencies, traveling in a direction allegedly given by the sum of the incident beams'
wavevectors. The technique was developed in 1987 by
Yuen-Ron Shen
Yuen-Ron Shen () is a Chinese physicist. He is a professor emeritus of physics at the University of California, Berkeley, known for his work on non-linear optics. He was born in Shanghai and graduated from National Taiwan University. He received ...
and his students as an extension of
second harmonic generation spectroscopy and rapidly applied to deduce the composition, orientation distributions, and structural information of molecules at gas–solid, gas–liquid and liquid–solid interfaces.
[Hunt, J.H.; Guyot-Sionnest, P.; Shen, Y.R.;"Observation of C-H stretch vibrations of monolayers of molecules optical sum-frequency generation". ''Chemical Physics Letters'', 133, 3, 1987 p 189-192. https://doi.org/10.1016/0009-2614(87)87049-5][Guyot-Sionnest, P.; Hunt, J.H.; Shen, Y.R.;"Sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy of a Langmuir film: Study of molecular orientation of a two-dimensional system". ''Physical Review Letters'', 59, 1987 p 1597. https://doi.org/10.1016/0009-2614(87)87049-5] Soon after its invention,
Philippe Guyot-Sionnest extended the technique to obtain the first measurements of electronic and vibrational dynamics at surfaces.
[Guyot-Sionnest, P.; Dumas, P.; Chabal, Y. J.; Higashi, G. S.;"Lifetime of an adsorbate-substrate vibration: H on Si(111)". ''Physical Review Letters'', 64, 1990, p 2146. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.64.2156][Guyot-Sionnest, P.;"Coherent processes at surfaces: Free-induction decay and photon echo of the Si-H stretching vibration for H/Si(111)". ''Physical Review Letters'', 66, 1991, p 1489. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.66.1489][Guyot-Sionnest, P.;"Two-phonon bound state for the hydrogen vibration on the H/Si(111) surface". ''Physical Review Letters'', 67, 1991, p 2323. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.67.2323] SFG has advantages in its ability to be monolayer surface sensitive, ability to be performed in situ (for example aqueous surfaces and in gases), and its capability to provide ultrafast time resolution. SFG gives information complementary to
infrared and
Raman spectroscopy
Raman spectroscopy () (named after Indian physicist C. V. Raman) is a spectroscopic technique typically used to determine vibrational modes of molecules, although rotational and other low-frequency modes of systems may also be observed. Raman sp ...
.
[Shen, Y.R.;"Surface properties probed by 2nd harmonic and sum frequency generation". ''Nature'', v 337, 1989, p 519-525.]
Theory
IR-visible sum frequency generation spectroscopy uses two laser beams (an infrared probe, and a visible pump) that spatially and temporally overlap at a surface of a material or the interface between two media. An output beam is generated at a frequency of the sum of the two input beams. The two input beams must be able to access the surface with sufficiently high intensities, and the output beam must be able to reflect off (or transmit through) the surface in order to be detected.
[Rangwalla, H.; Dhinojwala, A; (2004) "Probing Hidden Polymeric Interfaces Using IR-Visible Sum-Frequency Generation Spectroscopy". ''The Journal of Adhesion'', v80, Issue 1 & 2, p 37 - 59, ] Broadly speaking, most sum frequency spectrometers can be considered as one of two types, ''scanning'' systems (those with narrow bandwidth probe beams) and ''broadband'' systems (those with broad bandwidth probe beams). For the former type of spectrometer, the pump beam is a visible wavelength laser held at a constant frequency, and the other (the probe beam) is a tunable infrared laser — by tuning the IR laser, the system can scan across molecular resonances and obtain a vibrational spectrum of the interfacial region in a piecewise fashion.
In a broadband spectrometer, the visible pump beam is once again held at a fixed frequency, while the probe beam is spectrally broad. These laser beams overlap at a surface, but may access a wider range of molecular resonances simultaneously than a scanning spectrometer, and hence spectra can be acquired significantly faster, allowing the ability to perform time-resolved measurements with interfacial sensitivity.
Nonlinear susceptibility
For a given nonlinear optical process, the polarization
which generates the output is given by
:
where
is the
th order nonlinear susceptibility, for