Litcius/Paper detail

Polariton induced conical intersection and berry phase

Marwa H. Farag, Arkajit Mandal, Pengfei Huo

2021Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics37 citationsDOI

Abstract

We investigate the Polariton induced conical intersection (PICI) created from coupling a diatomic molecule with the quantized photon mode inside an optical cavity, and the corresponding Berry Phase effects. We use the rigorous Pauli-Fierz Hamiltonian to describe the quantum light-matter interactions between a LiF molecule and the cavity, and use the exact quantum propagation to investigate the polariton quantum dynamics. The molecular rotations relative to the cavity polarization direction play a role as the tuning mode of the PICI, resulting in an effective CI even within a diatomic molecule. To clearly demonstrate the dynamical effects of the Berry phase, we construct two additional models that have the same Born-Oppenheimer surface, but the effects of the geometric phase are removed. We find that when the initial wavefunction is placed in the lower polaritonic surface, the Berry phase causes a π phase-shift in the wavefunction after the encirclement around the CI, indicated from the nuclear probability distribution. On the other hand, when the initial wavefunction is placed in the upper polaritonic surface, the geometric phase significantly influences the couplings between polaritonic states and therefore, the population dynamics between them. These BP effects are further demonstrated through the photo-fragment angular distribution. PICI created from the quantized radiation field has the promise to open up new possibilities to modulate photochemical reactivities.

Topics & Concepts

Conical intersectionGeometric phaseConical surfacePolaritonDiatomic moleculePhase (matter)PhotonIntersection (aeronautics)PhysicsCoupling (piping)MoleculeCondensed matter physicsOpticsQuantum mechanicsMaterials scienceAerospace engineeringMetallurgyComposite materialEngineeringStrong Light-Matter InteractionsQuantum and electron transport phenomenaPlasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research