Abstract
In this work, we systematically investigate the mechanisms underlying the rate modification of ground-state chemical reactions in an optical cavity under vibrational strong-coupling conditions. We employ a symmetric double-well description of the molecular potential energy surface and a numerically exact open quantum system approach — the hierarchical equations of motion in twin space with a matrix product state solver. Our results predict the existence of multiple peaks in the photon frequency-dependent rate profile for a strongly anharmonic molecular system with multiple vibrational transition energies. The emergence of a new peak in the rate profile is attributed to the opening of an intramolecular reaction pathway, energetically fuelled by the cavity photon bath through a resonant cavity mode. The peak intensity is determined jointly by kinetic factors. Going beyond the single-molecule limit, we examine the effects of the collective coupling of two molecules to the cavity. We find that when two identical molecules are simultaneously coupled to the same resonant cavity mode, the reaction rate is further increased. This additional increase is associated with the activation of a cavity-induced intermolecular reaction channel. Furthermore, the rate modification due to these cavity-promoted reaction pathways remains unaffected, regardless of whether the molecular dipole moments are aligned in the same or opposite direction as the light polarization.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary information: Insights into the mechanisms of optical cavity-modified ground-state chemical reactions
Description
This supplementary material provides the details of (1) Matrix representation of the molecular dipole moment for different models; (2) Analysis of the energy level of several polaritonic states and Rabi splitting; (3) Reaction dynamics of a single molecule in a lossless cavity; (4) Analysis of the reaction dynamics for Model II inside the cavity with a stronger light-matter interaction ηc=0.005; (5) The photon distribution of the cavity mode; (6) The temperature effect on the rate modification for Model I inside the cavity; (7) Comparison of the reaction rates over a range of ηc between a monomer and a homodimer inside the cavity; (8) Comparison of the reaction rates between a monomer and a homodimer inside the cavity with the same Rabi splitting.
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