Energy transfer in N-component nanosystems enhanced by pulse-driven vibronic many-body entanglement
Abstract
The processing of energy by transfer and redistribution, plays a key role in the evolution of dynamical systems. At the ultrasmall and ultrafast scale of nanosystems, quantum coherence could in principle also play a role and has been reported in many pulse-driven nanosystems (e.g. quantum dots and even the microscopic Light-Harvesting Complex II (LHC-II) aggregate). Typical theoretical analyses cannot easily be scaled to describe these general N-component nanosystems; they do not treat the pulse dynamically; and they approximate memory effects. Here our aim is to shed light on what new physics might arise beyond these approximations. We adopt a purposely minimal model such that the time-dependence of the pulse is included explicitly in the Hamiltonian. This simple model generates complex dynamics: specifically, pulses of intermediate duration generate highly entangled vibronic (i.e. electronic-vibrational) states that spread multiple excitons – and hence energy – maximally within the system. Subsequent pulses can then act on such entangled states to efficiently channel subsequent energy capture. The underlying pulse-generated vibronic entanglement increases in strength and robustness as N increases.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Nov 15, 2023
- Source ID
- 10.1038/s41598-023-46256-z
Entities
People
- Fernando J. Gómez-Ruiz
- Ferney J. Rodríguez
- Luis Quiroga
- Neil F. Johnson
- Oscar L. Acevedo
Organizations
- Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- European Commission