2020
DOI: 10.1103/physrevresearch.2.033270
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Molecule-photon interactions in phononic environments

Abstract: Molecules constitute compact hybrid quantum optical systems that can interface photons, electronic degrees of freedom, localized mechanical vibrations, and phonons. In particular, the strong vibronic interaction between electrons and nuclear motion in a molecule resembles the optomechanical radiation pressure Hamiltonian. While molecular vibrations are often in the ground state even at elevated temperatures, one still needs to get a handle on decoherence channels associated with phonons before an efficient qua… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
(109 reference statements)
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“…/ω 2 b of a phonon mode14 .Interestingly, this molecular interaction mirrors the form of common cavity optomechanical Hamiltonians2,4,12,13,22,23 with the optomechanical constant g 0 = Ds ω b /2 EV12 , where D denotes the deformation potential induced in the impurity by the local strain s, E is the Young modulus of the host, and V is the phonon mode volume. Considering the deformation potential estimated in recent DBT:AC experiments 18 (D/2π ∼ 1300 THz), the small volumes of the nanocrystals (V ∼ 2.5 × 10 −4 µm 3 ), s ≈ 0.04 − 0.12, and E ≈ 10 10 Pa 23 (see SI), one arrives at g 0 /2π ∼ 50 − 150 MHz, comparable with or larger than the electronic decay rates of typical quantum emitters6,24,25 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 74%
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“…/ω 2 b of a phonon mode14 .Interestingly, this molecular interaction mirrors the form of common cavity optomechanical Hamiltonians2,4,12,13,22,23 with the optomechanical constant g 0 = Ds ω b /2 EV12 , where D denotes the deformation potential induced in the impurity by the local strain s, E is the Young modulus of the host, and V is the phonon mode volume. Considering the deformation potential estimated in recent DBT:AC experiments 18 (D/2π ∼ 1300 THz), the small volumes of the nanocrystals (V ∼ 2.5 × 10 −4 µm 3 ), s ≈ 0.04 − 0.12, and E ≈ 10 10 Pa 23 (see SI), one arrives at g 0 /2π ∼ 50 − 150 MHz, comparable with or larger than the electronic decay rates of typical quantum emitters6,24,25 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 74%
“…However, scientists have been increasingly turning their attention to molecules for their naturally rich and compact quantum mechanical settings, where a wide range of electronic, mechanical and magnetic degrees of freedom could be efficiently accessed and manipulated 2,[7][8][9][10] . A particularly intriguing promise of molecules is their use as quantum optomechanical platforms [2][3][4][5][11][12][13][14] , but this idea confronts the challenge that the various molecular degrees of freedom quickly lose their "quantumness" when coupled to the phononic bath of the environment in the condensed phase. In this theoretical work, we show how to create long-lived phononic states by tailoring the vibrational modes of organic crystals that embed impurity guest molecules.…”
Section: Optomechanical Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Furthermore, an approach based on the quantum Langevin equation to solve the HTC model has been developed recently [17]. It provides an alternative path to understand the Stokes and anti-Stokes processes [17], Purcell effect under the influence of the phononic environments [21], and the Floquent engineering [22] at the level of operators rather than states. However, the previous works [17,21,22] mainly focus on a single molecule.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%