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Dive into the research topics where Sanchali Bhattacharjee is active.

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Featured researches published by Sanchali Bhattacharjee.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

Electro-optic coefficients of 500 pm/V and beyond for organic materials

Larry R. Dalton; Bruce H. Robinson; Alex K.-Y. Jen; Philip Ried; B. E. Eichinger; Philip A. Sullivan; Andrew Akelaitis; Denise H. Bale; Marnie Haller; Jingdong Luo; Sen Liu; Yi Liao; Kimberly A. Firestone; Nishant Bhatambrekar; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Jessica Sinness; Scott R. Hammond; Robert Snoeberger; Mark Lingwood; Harry Rommel; Joe Amend; Sei-Hum Jang; Antao Chen; William H. Steier

Theoretical guidance, provided by quantum and statistical mechanical calculations, has aided the recent realization of electro-optic coefficients of greater than 300 pm/V (at 1.3 microns wavelength). This articles attempts to provide physical insight into those recent results and to explore avenues for the further improvement of electro-optic activity by structural modification, including to values of 500 pm/V and beyond. While large electro-optic coefficients are a necessary condition for extensive practical application of organic electro-optic materials, they are not a sufficient condition. Adequate thermal and photochemical stability, modest to low optical loss, and processability are important additional requirements. This article also examines such properties and suggests routes to achieving improved auxiliary properties.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

Acentric lattice electro-optic materials by rational design

Larry R. Dalton; Bruce H. Robinson; Alex K.-Y. Jen; Philip Ried; B. E. Eichinger; Philip A. Sullivan; Andrew Akelaitis; Denise H. Bale; Marnie Haller; Jingdong Luo; Sen Liu; Yi Liao; Kimberly A. Firestone; Nishant Bhatambrekar; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Jessica Sinness; Scott R. Hammond; Robert Snoeberger; Mark Lingwood; Harry Rommel; Joe Amend; Sei-Hum Jang; Antao Chen; William H. Steier

Quantum and statistical mechanical calculations have been used to guide the improvement of the macroscopic electro-optic activity of organic thin film materials to values greater than 300 pm/V at telecommunication wavelengths. Various quantum mechanical methods (Hartree-Fock, INDO, and density functional theory) have been benchmarked and shown to be reliable for estimating trends in molecular first hyperpolarizability, β, for simple variation of donor, bridge, and acceptor structures of charge-transfer (dipolar) chromophores. β values have been increased significantly over the past five years and quantum mechanical calculations suggest that they can be further significantly improved. Statistical mechanical calculations, including pseudo-atomistic Monte Carlo calculations, have guided the design of the super/supramolecular structures of chromophores so that they assemble, under the influence of electric field poling, into macroscopic lattices with high degrees of acentric order. Indeed, during the past year, chromophores doped into single- and multi-chromophore-containing dendrimer materials to form binary glasses have yielded thin films that exhibit electro-optic activities at telecommunication wavelengths of greater than 300 pm/V. Such materials may be viewed as intermediate between chromophore/polymer composites and crystalline organic chromophore materials. Theory suggests that further improvements of electro-optic activity are possible. Auxiliary properties of these materials, including optical loss, thermal and photochemical stability, and processability are discussed. Such organic electro-optic materials have been incorporated into silicon photonic circuitry for active wavelength division multiplexing, reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexing, and high bandwidth optical rectification. A variety of all-organic devices, including stripline, cascaded prism, Fabry-Perot etalon, and ring microresonator devices, have been fabricated and evaluated.


Optically based materials and optically based biological and chemical sensing for defence. Conference | 2005

Optimizing electro-optic activity in chromophore/polymer composites and in organic chromophore glasses

Larry R. Dalton; Bruce H. Robinson; Alex K.-Y. Jen; Philip Ried; B. E. Eichinger; Philip A. Sullivan; Andrew Akelaitis; Denise H. Bale; Marnie Haller; Jingdong Luo; Sen Liu; Yi Liao; Kimberly A. Firestone; Allyson Sago; Nishant Bhatambrekar; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Jessica Sinness; Scott R. Hammond; Robert Snoeberger; Mark Lingwood; Harry Rommel; Joe Amend; Sei-Hum Jang; Antao Chen; William H. Steier

The motivation for use of organic electro-optic materials derives from (1) the inherently fast (sub-picosecond) response of π-electron systems in these materials to electrical perturbation making possible device applications with gigahertz and terahertz bandwidths, (2) the potential for exceptionally large (e.g., 1000 pm/V) electro-optic coefficients that would make possible devices operating with millivolt drive voltages, (3) light weight, which is a concern for satellite applications, and (4) versatile processability that permits rapid fabrication of a wide variety of devices including conformal and flexible devices, three dimensional active optical circuitry, hybrid organic/silicon photonic circuitry, and optical circuitry directly integrated with semiconductor VLSI electronics. The most significant concerns associated with the use of organic electro-optic materials relate to thermal and photochemical stability, although materials with glass transition temperatures on the order of 200°C have been demonstrated and photostability necessary for long term operation at telecommunication power levels has been realized. This communication focuses on explaining the theoretical paradigms that have permitted electro-optic coefficients greater than 300 pm/V (at telecommunication wavelengths) to be achieved and on explaining likely improvements in electro-optic activity that will be realized in the next 1-2 years. Systematic modifications of materials to improve thermal and photochemical stability are also discussed.


Organic Photonic Materials and Devices VI | 2004

Exploration of a Series Type Multifunctionalized Nonlinear Optical Chromophore Concept

Philip A. Sullivan; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; B. E. Eichinger; Kimberly A. Firestone; Bruce H. Robinson; Larry R. Dalton

Density functional theory calculations were used to develop understanding of the effects of differing substitution patterns in multiply donor and acceptor substituted nonlinear optical chromophores. A novel series type substitution design was presented and evaluated. Calculations were performed for a number of structures and hyperpolarizability values were compared. The data obtained showed an increase in molecular first hyperpoloarizability in multifunctional chromophores based on this series type design as compared with linear molecules constructed from the same donor-bridge-acceptor components. This data was then used to direct the synthesis of novel nonlinear optical chromophores.


Active and passive optical components for WDM communications. Conference | 2005

Organic electro-optic glasses for WDM applications

Larry R. Dalton; Axel Scherer; Antao Chen; Alex K.-Y. Jen; Philip J. Reid; Bruce H. Robinson; B. E. Eichinger; Michael Hochberg; Tom Baehr-Jones; Anna Pyajt; Jocelyn Takayesu; Philip A. Sullivan; Andrew Akelaitis; Rhys Lawson; Denise H. Bale; Marnie Haller; Jingdong Luo; Sen Liu; Yi Liao; Kimberly A. Firestone; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Jessica Sinness; Scott R. Hammond; Allyson E. Sgro; Robert Snoeberger; Mark Lingwood; William H. Steier

This communication primarily deals with utilizing organic electro-optic (OEO) materials for the fabrication of active wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) transmitter/receiver systems and reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexers (ROADMs), including the fabrication of hybrid OEO/silicon photonic devices. Fabrication is carried out by a variety of techniques including soft and nanoimprint lithography. The production of conformal and flexible ring microresonator devices is also discussed. The fabrication of passive devices is also briefly reviewed. Critical to the realization of improved performance for devices fabricated from OEO materials has been the improvement of electro-optic activity to values of 300 pm/V (or greater) at telecommunication wavelengths. This improvement in materials has been realized exploiting a theoretically-inspired (quantum and statistical mechanics) paradigm for the design of chromophores with dramatically improved molecular first hyperpolarizability and that exhibit intermolecular electrostatic interactions that promote self-assembly, under the influence of an electric poling field, into noncentrosymmetric macroscopic lattices. New design paradigms have also been developed for improving the glass transition of these materials, which is critical for thermal and photochemical stability and for optimizing processing protocols such as nanoimprint lithography. Ring microresonator devices discussed in this communication were initially fabricated using chromophore guest/polymer host materials characterized by electro-optic coefficients on the order of 50 pm/V (at telecommunication wavelengths). Voltage-controlled optical tuning of the pass band of these ring microresonators was experimental determined to lie in the range 1-10 GHz/V or all-organic and for OEO/silicon photonic devices. With new materials, values approaching 50 GHz/V should be possible. Values as high as 300 GHz/V may ultimately be achievable.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006

Antiparallel-Aligned Neutral-Ground-State and Zwitterionic Chromophores as a Nonlinear Optical Material

Yi Liao; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Kimberly A. Firestone; B. E. Eichinger; Rajan Paranji; Cyrus A. Anderson; Bruce H. Robinson; Philip J. Reid; Larry R. Dalton


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2006

Influence of isomerization on nonlinear optical properties of molecules

T. Kinnibrugh; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Philip A. Sullivan; Christine M. Isborn; B. H. Robinson, ,‡ and; B. E. Eichinger


Chemistry of Materials | 2008

Molecular Self-Assembly of Mixed High-Beta Zwitterionic and Neutral Ground-State NLO Chromophores

Michael Halter; Yi Liao; Ryan M. Plocinik; David C. Coffey; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Ursula Mazur; Garth J. Simpson; Bruce H. Robinson; Sarah L. Keller


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2006

Linear and nonlinear optical properties of a macrocyclic trichromophore bundle with parallel-aligned dipole moments.

Yi Liao; Kimberly A. Firestone; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Jingdong Luo; Marnie Haller; Steven K. Hau; Cyrus A. Anderson; David Lao; B. E. Eichinger; Bruce H. Robinson; Philip J. Reid; A. K.-Y. Jen; Larry R. Dalton


European Symposium on Optics and Photonics for Defence and Security | 2004

Organic electro-optic materials

Larry R. Dalton; Bruce H. Robinson; Alex K.-Y. Jen; Philip Ried; B. E. Eichinger; Sei-Hum Jang; Jingdong Luo; Sen Liu; Yi Liao; Kimberly A. Firestone; Nishant Bhatambrekar; Denise H. Bale; Marnie Haller; Sanchali Bhattacharjee; Jessica Schendel; Philip A. Sullivan; Scott R. Hammond; Field Cady; Antao Chen; William H. Steier

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Yi Liao

University of Washington

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Jingdong Luo

University of Washington

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Marnie Haller

University of Washington

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Alex K.-Y. Jen

City University of Hong Kong

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Antao Chen

University of Washington

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