Molecular van der Waals fluids in cavity quantum electrodynamics

ORAL

Abstract

Intermolecular van der Waals interactions are central to chemical and physical phenomena ranging from biomolecule binding to soft-matter phase transitions. However, there are currently very limited approaches to manipulate van der Waals interactions. In this work, we demonstrate that strong light-matter coupling can be used to tune van der Waals interactions, and, thus, control the thermodynamic properties of many-molecule systems. Our analysis reveals orientation-dependent intermolecular interactions between van der Waals molecules (for example, H2) that depend on the distance between the molecules R as R−3 and R0. Moreover, we employ non-perturbative ab initio cavity quantum electrodynamics calculations to develop machine learning-based van der Waals interaction potentials for molecules inside optical cavities. By simulating fluids of up to 1,000 H2 molecules, we demonstrate that strong light-matter coupling can tune the structural and thermodynamic properties of molecular fluids. In particular, we observe collective orientational order in many-molecule systems as a result of cavity-modified van der Waals interactions. These simulations and analyses demonstrate both local and collective effects induced by strong light-matter coupling and open new paths for controlling the properties of condensed phase systems.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2209.07956.pdf

Presenters

  • John P Philbin

    University of California, Los Angeles

Authors

  • John P Philbin

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Tor S Haugland

    Norwegian University of Science and Technology

  • Ming Chen

    Purdue University

  • Tushar K Ghosh

    Purdue University

  • Prineha Narang

    Harvard University, University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA

  • Enrico Ronca

    Istituto per i Processi Chimico Fisici del CNR

  • Henrik Koch

    Norwegian University of Science and Technology