Excitonic effects in nonlinear optical responses: Diagrammatic approach, exciton-state formalism and first-principles calculations

ORAL

Abstract

Nonlinear optical (NLO) responses have garnered tremendous interest for decades due to their fundamental and technological interests. The theory and calculations of NLO responses including electron-hole interactions, which is especially crucial for reduced-dimensional materials, however, remain underdeveloped. Here, we develop an ab initio approach to calculate second-order and third-order nonlinear responses with excitonic effects in an exciton-state basis, going beyond the independent-particle approximation. We compute second harmonic generation (SHG) and third harmonic generation (THG) in monolayer h-BN and MoS2 employing exciton states from GW-Bethe-Salpeter equation (GW-BSE) calculations and show both materials exhibit huge excitonic enhancement. The physical origin of the enhancement is directly understood through the coupling amplitudes among exciton states, assisted with diagrammatic representations. Our method provides an accurate and ab initio description of NLO responses, capturing self-energy and electron-hole interaction effects.

* This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation. Computational resources were provided by NERSC, ACCESS and TACC Frontera.

Publication: J. Ruan, Y.-H Chan, S. G. Louie, Excitonic effects in nonlinear optical responses: Exciton-state formalism and first-principles calculations. arXiv:2310.09674

Presenters

  • Jiawei Ruan

    University of California at Berkeley, UC Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Authors

  • Jiawei Ruan

    University of California at Berkeley, UC Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Yang-hao Chan

    Academia Sinica, Institute of Atomic and Molecular Sciences, Academia Sinica and Physics Division, National Center for Theoretical Sciences, Taipei, Taiwan

  • Steven G Louie

    University of California at Berkeley, University of California at Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, UC-Berkeley