Intermolecular bonds are weak compared to covalent bonds, but they are strong enough to influence the properties of large molecular systems. In this work, we investigate how strong light-matter coupling inside an optical cavity can modify intermolecular forces and illustrate the varying necessity of correlation in their description. The electromagnetic field inside the cavity can modulate the ground state properties of weakly bound complexes. Tuning the field polarization and cavity frequency, the interactions can be stabilized or destabilized, and electron densities, dipole moments, and polarizabilities can be altered. We demonstrate that electron-photon correlation is fundamental to describe intermolecular interactions in strong light-matter coupling. This work proposes optical cavities as a novel tool to manipulate and control ground state properties, solvent effects, and intermolecular interactions for molecules and materials.
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Coupling between molecules and vacuum photon fields inside an optical cavity has proven to be an effective way to engineer molecular properties, in particular reactivity. To ease the rationalization of cavity induced effects we introduce an ab initio method leading to the first fully consistent molecular orbital theory for quantum electrodynamics environments. Our framework is non-perturbative and explains modifications of the electronic structure due to the interaction with the photon field. In this work, we show that the newly developed orbital theory can be used to predict cavity induced modifications of molecular reactivity and pinpoint classes of systems with significant cavity effects. We also investigate electronic cavity-induced modifications of reaction mechanisms in vibrational strong coupling regimes.
Plasmonic nanocavities
enable the confinement of molecules and
electromagnetic fields within nanometric volumes. As a consequence,
the molecules experience a remarkably strong interaction with the
electromagnetic field to such an extent that the quantum states of
the system become hybrids between light and matter: polaritons. Here,
we present a nonperturbative method to simulate the emerging properties
of such polaritons: it combines a high-level quantum chemical description
of the molecule with a quantized description of the localized surface
plasmons in the nanocavity. We apply the method to molecules of realistic
complexity in a typical plasmonic nanocavity, featuring also a subnanometric
asperity (picocavity). Our results disclose the effects of the mutual
polarization and correlation of plasmons and molecular excitations,
disregarded so far. They also quantify to what extent the molecular
charge density can be manipulated by nanocavities and stand as benchmarks
to guide the development of methods for molecular polaritonics.
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