Light-Induced Quantum Self-Trapping of Vibrational Excitons in an Optical Cavity
Vincent Pouthier, Saad Yalouz

TL;DR
This study explores how optical cavities can induce and control vibrational energy localization and transfer in quantum systems through light-matter interactions, revealing regimes of enhanced self-trapping and energy flow.
Contribution
It demonstrates cavity-mediated control of vibrational exciton transport, showing regimes of energy localization and transfer dependent on coupling strength.
Findings
Weak coupling enhances self-trapping via destructive interference.
Strong coupling can accelerate vibrational energy transfer.
Critical coupling points lead to stabilized quantum self-trapping.
Abstract
In an optical cavity, strong light--matter coupling between excitons and photons has been widely reported as a way to enhance energy delocalization through spatially extended polaritonic states. In contrast, leveraging cavity-mediated light--matter effects to promote the reciprocal phenomenon, namely \textit{energy localization}, remains largely underexplored. In the present work, we address this question by focusing on a special form of energy localization arising from nonlinear matter interactions: \textit{Quantum Self-Trapping} (QST). We employ a generalized Tavis--Cummings model to investigate the transport of vibrational excitons -- \textit{i.e., vibrons} -- between two anharmonic vibrational modes and examine their interplay with cavity photons. In the absence of a cavity, the arising of true and complete QST -- \textit{i.e.}, an infinite-lifetime localization -- is not possible…
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