Polariton-induced Purcell effects via a reduced semiclassical electrodynamics approach
Recent experiments have demonstrated that polariton formation provides a novel strategy for modifying local molecular processes when a large ensemble of molecules is confined within an optical cavity. Herein, a numerical strategy based on coupled Maxwell--Schr\"odinger equations is examined for...
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent experiments have demonstrated that polariton formation provides a
novel strategy for modifying local molecular processes when a large ensemble of
molecules is confined within an optical cavity. Herein, a numerical strategy
based on coupled Maxwell--Schr\"odinger equations is examined for simulating
local molecular processes in a realistic cavity structure under collective
strong coupling. In this approach, only a few molecules, referred to as quantum
impurities, are treated quantum mechanically, while the remaining macroscopic
molecular layer and the cavity structure are modeled using dielectric
functions. When a single electronic two-level system embedded in a Lorentz
medium is confined in a two-dimensional Bragg resonator, our numerical
simulations reveal a polariton-induced Purcell effect: the radiative decay rate
of the quantum impurity is significantly enhanced by the cavity when the
impurity frequency matches the polariton frequency, while the rate can
sometimes be greatly suppressed when the impurity is near resonance with the
bulk molecules forming strong coupling. Additionally, this approach
demonstrates that the cavity absorption of light exhibits
Rabi-splitting-dependent suppression due to the inclusion of a realistic cavity
structure. Our simulations also identify a fundamental limitation of this
approach -- an inaccurate description of polariton dephasing rates into dark
modes. This arises because the dark-mode degrees of freedom are not explicitly
included when most molecules are modeled using dielectric functions. As the
polariton-induced Purcell effect alters molecular radiative decay differently
from the Purcell effect under weak coupling, this polariton-induced effect may
facilitate understanding the origin of polariton-modified photochemistry under
electronic strong coupling. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.04694 |