4.6 Article

A Theoretical Perspective on Molecular Polaritonics

Journal

ACS PHOTONICS
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 1830-1841

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.2c00048

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council [ERC-2016-StG-714870]
  2. Spanish Ministry for Science, Innovation, and Universities-Agencia Estatal de Investigacion through the QuantERA program of the European Commission [RTI2018-099737-BI00, PCI2018-093145]
  3. Spanish Ministry for Science, Innovation, and Universities-Agencia Estatal de Investigacion through Community of Madrid [CEX2018-000805-M]
  4. Proyecto Sinergico (NanoQuCo-CM) of the Community of Madrid [CAM 2020 Y2020/TCS-6545]

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The article discusses the theoretical research on the strong coupling between organic molecules and light modes over the past decade, describing the difficulty and complexity in predicting polaritonic phenomena in this light-matter interaction, and highlighting the challenges in modeling such interactions.
In the past decade, much theoretical research has focused on studying the strong coupling between organic molecules (or quantum emitters, in general) and light modes. The description and prediction of polaritonic phenomena emerging in this light-matter interaction regime have proven to be difficult tasks. The challenge originates from the enormous number of degrees of freedom that need to be taken into account, both in the organic molecules and in their photonic environment. On one hand, the accurate treatment of the vibrational spectrum of the former is key, and simplified quantum models are not valid in many cases. On the other hand, most photonic setups have complex geometric and material characteristics, with the result that photon fields corresponding to more than just a single electromagnetic mode contribute to the light-matter interaction in these platforms. Moreover, loss and dissipation, in the form of absorption or radiation, must also be included in the theoretical description of polaritons. Here, we review and offer our own perspective on some of the work recently done in the modeling of interacting molecular and optical states with increasing complexity.

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