Developing Entangled Two-Photon Absorption for Unique Control over Excitation of Organic Chromophores: An Experimental and Theoretical Approach
Burdick, Ryan
2021
Abstract
By controlling quantum interactions of molecules and light, new technology in quantum information science promises to outperform classical-based technology in both function and efficiency. In particular, chemists stand to gain much advantage from quantum sensing techniques, allowing them to measure new spectroscopic signals that classical techniques cannot do, control photochemical reactions in new ways, and even measure nonlinear interactions with a simple push of a button. Much of the current work in using entangled photons for spectroscopy has focused on the unique physics of the photons. There is still much to be learned about how the molecule’s structure influences quantum spectroscopic signals and leaves its signature. In this dissertation, the unique ways that organic chromophores interact with entangled photons from spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) has been analyzed in detail. In Chapter 3, I calculate entangled two-photon absorption (ETPA) cross-sections for a few diatomic molecules to show how the varying dipole properties of the molecules affect the ETPA cross-section oscillation vs the entanglement time, Te. In Chapter 4, new theory shows that the excited state linewidth from ETPA excitation is extremely narrow compared to classical TPA excitation. I show that the reason for the ETPA linewidth being so narrow is due to the large arrival time uncertainty of the entangled photon pair, which makes the first photons’ absorption time in the molecule largely uncertain and effectively narrows the excited state linewidth. In Chapter 5, I used Type-II SPDC to prove, for the first time, that two halogenated anesthetic ethers, sevoflurane and isoflurane, have the ability to target and interact with quantum particles by showing that they interact with 800 nm entangled photons but not 800 nm classical photons. In Chapter 6, I build an ETPA experimental setup that uses CW laser pumping of Type-I SPDC, which is shown to significantly improve the accuracy, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and limit of detection of ETPA while also making the experiment more compact and cost-effective. I also show how to quantify the degree of frequency entanglement using the Schmidt decomposition of the joint frequency spectrum and propose how the Schmidt modes can be tuned to control photochemical reactions. Contrary to prior belief in the literature, I show experimentally in Chapter 7 that ETPA with Type-I SPDC increases linearly with increasing Te, allowing one to increase the ETPA cross-section by an order of magnitude by increasing Te from a few fs to ~10 ps. This enhancement is due to the entanglement area, Ae, decreasing as the frequency bandwidth decreases, which is how Te is increased. This spatial-spectral coupling has previously been overlooked in the context of ETPA, causing previous theoretical models to underestimate the ETPA cross-section at ps Te by 3-4 orders of magnitude. Using ps Te Type-I SPDC, ps-scale excited state dynamics can be studied using ETPA, and photochemical reactions with intermediate steps, such as isomerizations or solvent reorganization, can be controlled. The experimental techniques and theoretical work here has provided a much needed improvement to make ETPA a more quantitatively robust analytical technique that is useful and accessible to the researchers who can benefit most from its applications: chemists, biologists, and anyone who studies the quantum principles underlying all aspects of chemistry.Deep Blue DOI
Subjects
entangled two-photon absorption physical chemistry experiment theory
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