Cavity-Altered Thermal Isomerization Rates and Dynamical Resonant Localization in Vibro-Polaritonic Chemistry
Eric W. Fischer, Janet Anders, Peter Saalfrank

TL;DR
This study investigates how strong light-matter coupling in optical cavities influences molecular reaction rates, revealing quantum effects like mode stiffening and tunneling attenuation, and demonstrating resonance-induced dynamical localization affecting reactivity.
Contribution
It provides a mechanistic understanding of cavity-modified reaction rates through topological analysis and quantum simulations, highlighting two quantum effects and resonance behavior in vibro-polaritonic chemistry.
Findings
Reaction rates are decelerated due to mode stiffening and tunneling broadening.
Resonance with cavity frequency reduces reaction probability.
Dynamical localization explains resonance effects on reactivity.
Abstract
It has been experimentally demonstrated that reaction rates for molecules embedded in microfluidic optical cavities are altered when compared to rates observed under "ordinary" reaction conditions. However, precise mechanisms of how strong coupling of an optical cavity mode to molecular vibrations affect the reactivity and how resonance behavior emerges are still under dispute. In the present work, we approach these mechanistic issues from the perspective of a thermal model reaction, the inversion of ammonia along the umbrella mode, in presence of a single cavity mode of varying frequency and coupling strength. A topological analysis of the related cavity Born-Oppenheimer potential energy surface in combination with quantum mechanical and transition state theory rate calculations reveals two quantum effects, leading to decelerated reaction rates in qualitative agreement with…
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