Observation of magneto-electric rectification at non-relativistic intensities

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Abstract

The subject of electromagnetism has often been called electrodynamics to emphasize the dominance of the electric field in dynamic light–matter interactions that take place under non-relativistic conditions. Here we show experimentally that the often neglected optical magnetic field can nevertheless play an important role in a class of optical nonlinearities driven by both the electric and magnetic components of light at modest (non-relativistic) intensities. We specifically report the observation of magneto-electric rectification, a previously unexplored nonlinearity at the molecular level which has important potential for energy conversion, ultrafast switching, nano-photonics, and nonlinear optics. Our experiments were carried out in nanocrystalline pentacene thin films possessing spatial inversion symmetry that prohibited second-order, all-electric nonlinearities but allowed magneto-electric rectification.

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Trinh, M. T., Smail, G., Makhal, K., Yang, D. S., Kim, J., & Rand, S. C. (2020). Observation of magneto-electric rectification at non-relativistic intensities. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19125-w

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