Dm. Bishop et al., CALCULATION OF VIBRATIONAL DYNAMIC HYPERPOLARIZABILITIES FOR H2O, CO2, AND NH3, The Journal of chemical physics, 98(10), 1993, pp. 8024-8030
Dynamic vibrational first and second hyperpolarizabilities, applicable
to a number of nonlinear optical processes, have been calculated for
H2O, CO2, and NH3 at a typical laser frequency. As a percentage of the
ir electronic counterparts, they range from being very small to being
on the order of 20-30 %. The static values have also been calculated a
nd are much larger. The calculations were based on perturbation theory
and required knowledge of (a) first and second derivatives of the ele
ctrical properties (dipole moment, polarizability, and first hyperpola
rizability functions) with respect to the normal coordinates, and (b)
the harmonic and first anharmonic force constants. These were found at
both the SCF and MP2 levels of approximation. In most cases electron
correlation has a marked effect on the vibrational hyperpolarizabiliti
es. Anharmonicity contributions are relatively small except for the st
atic case and for the dc-Kerr effect.