English

Molecule-photon interactions in phononic environments

Quantum Physics 2023-08-22 v3 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics Optics

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 quantum optical network based on opto-vibrational interactions in solid-state molecular systems could be realized. As a step towards a better understanding of decoherence in phononic environments, we take here an open quantum system approach to the non-equilibrium dynamics of guest molecules embedded in a crystal, identifying regimes of Markovian versus non-Markovian vibrational relaxation. A stochastic treatment based on quantum Langevin equations predicts collective vibron-vibron dynamics that resembles processes of sub- and superradiance for radiative transitions. This in turn leads to the possibility of decoupling intramolecular vibrations from the phononic bath, allowing for enhanced coherence times of collective vibrations. For molecular polaritonics in strongly confined geometries, we also show that the imprint of opto-vibrational couplings onto the emerging output field results in effective polariton cross-talk rates for finite bath occupancies.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1912.02635,
  title  = {Molecule-photon interactions in phononic environments},
  author = {Michael Reitz and Christian Sommer and Burak Gurlek and Vahid Sandoghdar and Diego Martin-Cano and Claudiu Genes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1912.02635},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

[v2]: revised abstract and introduction, [v3]: corrected rotating frame in Eqs. (31)

R2 v1 2026-06-23T12:37:00.631Z