1 / 12

Resonant Enhancement and Dissipation in Nonequilibrium van der Waals Forces

Resonant Enhancement and Dissipation in Nonequilibrium van der Waals Forces. Adam E. Cohen (Stanford) Shaul Mukamel (UC Irvine). 3 + 3 = 6. Gauss : if. and f is insensible between macroscopic objects, then. van der Waals :. a ~ index of refraction (empirically). McLachlan :. T = 0:.

aldis
Télécharger la présentation

Resonant Enhancement and Dissipation in Nonequilibrium van der Waals Forces

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Resonant Enhancement and Dissipation in Nonequilibrium van der Waals Forces Adam E. Cohen (Stanford) Shaul Mukamel (UC Irvine)

  2. 3 + 3 = 6 Gauss: if and f is insensible between macroscopic objects, then van der Waals: a ~ index of refraction (empirically) McLachlan: T = 0: J = coupling ‘ a =polarizability T > 0: Intermolecular forces and optical response

  3. coordinate operator classical source Liouville superoperator Liou. Space interaction picture Commutator Time-ordering superoperator Expectation value Anticommutator Start with perturbations to the individual molecules: Relating Nonlinear Optical Response to Intermolecular Forces Response given by Volterra series: Can calculate or measure R(1), R(2), … for any initial state. To calculate R(n):

  4. Do the nonlinear response functions completely describe a molecule? In a quantum system or a classical ensemble, fluctuations have a life of their own Calculate response of fluctuations to a perturbation: (Compare with ) Call R+...+-...-Generalized Response Functions (GRFs) R++ and R+- are related by the Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem (FDT) Causality  Generalized K-K relations Thermal equilibrium  Generalized FDT

  5. Liouville superoperator Two coupled molecules Coupled molecules: Want to evaluate: Again Joint response function: Using superoperator algebra, we can factor the joint response function: The joint response of the coupled molecules depends on all GRFs of the individual molecules.

  6. Example: Coupled Harmonic Oscillators 1st order response to coupling J(t)papb: Time domain: Frequency domain: Steady state coupling: Reproduces McLachlan formula for Ta = Tb bb/ ba c(1)(0) wb/ wa Phys. Rev. Lett.91, 233202 (2003)

  7. Dissipation between coupled SHOs For time-varying J, need: Force Dissipation bb/ ba bb/ ba Re[c(1)] Im[c(1)] w w Possibility of negative friction

  8. Do not fret for it leads only to evil. --Psalm 37 orientational factor donor emission spectrum lifetime of donor Example: FRET force Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) is mediated by the same dipole-dipole interaction that mediates the vdW force. Forster rate of FRET: Interaction energy from FRET: Kramers-Kronig relation between kFRETand UFRET UFRET can also be thought of as optical trapping of acceptor in near-field of excited donor. J. Phys. Chem. A107 (19) 3633 (2003)

  9. Sample calculation Chlorophyll b in diethyl ether FRET force FRET FRET force may be either attractive or repulsive FRET force may be much stronger than vdW force

  10. Possibilities for experimental verification • NLO effects in critical systems (gasses, binary mixtures, polymers) • Conformational changes in tethered bichromophores • Concentration quenching • Solid state measurements (Casimir-type)

  11. Conclusions • Quantum ensemble described by Generalized Response Functions (GRFs) • Response functions of two coupled systems may be expressed in terms of the GRFs of the constituents • vdW forces between objects at different temperatures or in relative motion show resonant enhancement and (possibly negative) dissipation • A mechanical force accompanies FRET

  12. Acknowledgments Professor Shaul Mukamel (UCI) $$ Hertz Foundation $$

More Related