Plasmonic nanocavities enable the confinement of molecules and electromagnetic fields within nanometric volumes. As a consequence, the molecules experience a remarkably strong interaction with the electromagnetic field to such an extent that the quantum states of the system become hybrids between light and matter: polaritons. Here, we present a nonperturbative method to simulate the emerging properties of such polaritons: it combines a high-level quantum chemical description of the molecule with a quantized description of the localized surface plasmons in the nanocavity. We apply the method to molecules of realistic complexity in a typical plasmonic nanocavity, featuring also a subnanometric asperity (picocavity). Our results disclose the effects of the mutual polarization and correlation of plasmons and molecular excitations, disregarded so far. They also quantify to what extent the molecular charge density can be manipulated by nanocavities and stand as benchmarks to guide the development of methods for molecular polaritonics.

Fregoni, J., Haugland, T.s., Pipolo, S., Giovannini, T., Koch, H., Corni, S. (2021). Strong Coupling between Localized Surface Plasmons and Molecules by Coupled Cluster Theory. NANO LETTERS, 21(15), 6664-6670 [10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c02162].

Strong Coupling between Localized Surface Plasmons and Molecules by Coupled Cluster Theory

Giovannini T.;
2021-01-01

Abstract

Plasmonic nanocavities enable the confinement of molecules and electromagnetic fields within nanometric volumes. As a consequence, the molecules experience a remarkably strong interaction with the electromagnetic field to such an extent that the quantum states of the system become hybrids between light and matter: polaritons. Here, we present a nonperturbative method to simulate the emerging properties of such polaritons: it combines a high-level quantum chemical description of the molecule with a quantized description of the localized surface plasmons in the nanocavity. We apply the method to molecules of realistic complexity in a typical plasmonic nanocavity, featuring also a subnanometric asperity (picocavity). Our results disclose the effects of the mutual polarization and correlation of plasmons and molecular excitations, disregarded so far. They also quantify to what extent the molecular charge density can be manipulated by nanocavities and stand as benchmarks to guide the development of methods for molecular polaritonics.
2021
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore PHYS-04/A - Fisica teorica della materia, modelli, metodi matematici e applicazioni
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Cavity-QED
Nanoplasmonics
Plexcitons
Polaritonic Chemistry
Quantum Chemistry
Quantum coupling
Quantum Nanoparticles
Fregoni, J., Haugland, T.s., Pipolo, S., Giovannini, T., Koch, H., Corni, S. (2021). Strong Coupling between Localized Surface Plasmons and Molecules by Coupled Cluster Theory. NANO LETTERS, 21(15), 6664-6670 [10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c02162].
Fregoni, J; Haugland, Ts; Pipolo, S; Giovannini, T; Koch, H; Corni, S
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/393272
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