Weak Coupling as a Tool for Enhancing Nonlinear Infrared Signal of Chemical Species
ORAL
Abstract
The existing literature contains numerous examples of vibrational strong coupling (VSC) in which the coupling of a vibrational mode and a cavity mode results in new transitions termed vibration-cavity polaritons. These vibration-cavity polaritons possess both molecular and photonic character. VSC has previously proven useful in applications such as modifying reaction kinetics and altering product ratios. Herein we explore a different regime of vibrational-cavity coupling for systems where the optical and vibrational mode are only weakly coupled. Assuming a cavity mode is resonant with the vibrational mode of interest, the act of inserting a molecule into a cavity can enhance the nonlinear signal by over an order of magnitude. This effect manifests as increased amplitude in two-dimensional infrared (2D-IR) and pump-probe spectra. The signal enhancement occurs despite the lack of energetically-split polaritonic modes commonly associated with VSC. Herein we use the carbonyl stretch of W(CO)6 to compare the dynamics for weakly coupled molecules with bare molecules via their respective frequency-frequency correlation function (FFCF) parameters. FFCF values such as the homogeneous linewidth contribution are reported in a range of concentrations with various solvents to determine their dependence on the phenomena responsible for the signal enhancement. We also use our measurements to estimate a limit of detection for dilute weakly-coupled solutions such as W(CO)6. A more thorough understanding of the weak coupling regime could give rise to new methods of chemical sensing for especially dilute systems and extend 2D-IR to previously inaccessible species with particularly weak transition dipole moments.
*The work herein is supported by the Office of Naval Research through the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory. CGP gratefully acknowledges her postdoctoral fellowship administered by the American Society for Engineering Education.
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Presenters
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Cynthia G Pyles
- ASEE Postdoctoral Research Fellow