Selective Orientation of Chiral Molecules by Laser Fields with Twisted Polarization

Abstract

We explore a pure optical method for enantioselective orientation of chiral molecules by means of laser fields with twisted polarization. Several field implementations are considered, including a pair of delayed cross-polarized laser pulses, an optical centrifuge, and polarization shaped pulses. The underlying classical orientation mechanism common for all these fields is discussed, and its operation is demonstrated for a range of chiral molecules of various complexity: hydrogen thioperoxide ( HSOH), propylene oxide ( CH3CHCH2O) and ethyl oxirane ( CH3CH2CHCH2O). The presented results demonstrate generality, versatility and robustness of this optical method for manipulating molecular enantiomers in the gas phase.

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