Pr. Mabrouk Zouari
mabrouk.zouari@mustuniversity.tn
00216 71 180 108
Box : 118
Biography
Recherche
Teaching
Publications
Within the framework of the preparation of the doctoral thesis of the Strasbourg University my research works concerned the interaction radiation-matter and the laser application in industry. This subject aroused a lot of attention for its scientific and technological importance. The lasers which I used are: CO 2 laser and YAG the power of which can achieve 1.5kW.
Afterward I directed my researches to the nonlinear methods spectroscopic to study the ultrafast dynamic processes in the molecular adsorbates.
We first developed a theoretical description of the ultrafast dynamical processes taking place in the molecular adsorbates. An extensive analytical theory of sum-frequency generation with infrared pump and infrared-visible probe is presented. This description is done in terms of five-wave mixing for both steady-state and time-resolved experiments. It has been shown that the fourth-order induced polarization at the sum-frequency signal can be expressed as sum of different components which are induced by the different field-molecule interactions.
Numerical simulations have been performed on the C-H stretched mode on the hydrogen- terminated H/C(III)(1×1) surface to evaluate the dephasing constants. Later, by introducing a time delayed structure of the probe pulses, we demonstrate the ability of these experiments to analyze the various dephasing processes in the excited configurations. In the last part of this work the contributions of the substrate electric field to the molecular optical nonlinearities have been evaluated. In the limiting case of an homogeneous electrostatic field, besides the contributions associated to the induced dipole moments, we have additional contributions which only exist if the adsorbed molecule has permanent dipole moments. For the more general inhomogeneous electrostatic field case, while the main observations remain valid, the Franck-Condon factors are modified by the molecular structure changes induced by the electrostatic field. In addition, we have a strong redistribution of the vibronic couplings resulting from analytical Q-dependence of the partial charge distribution which is a signature of the field inhomogeneities.