A&P Seminar - Andrew Musser

Andrew Musser
Event starts on this day

May

1

2025

Event starts at this time 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm
Cost: Free
The Analytical and Physical Seminar Series presents: Andrew Musser

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The Analytical and Physical Seminar Series presents: Andrew Musser

Cornell University

Host: Sean Roberts

Title: Embrace the darkness: From singlet fission to exciton-polaritons

Refreshments served at 3:15pm

Location: WEL 2.122

Polaritons are increasingly touted as a promising tool to ‘rewrite’ the functional behavior of molecular systems. Polaritons are mixed states formed from the hybridization of molecular transition dipoles with a confined electromagnetic field. Originally the purview of ultra-cold physics, when this concept is applied to molecular vibrational or electronic absorption transitions polaritons can be attained at room temperature. Studies over the last decade have revealed a host of weird and wonderful effects that result, from enhanced energy transport and charge carrier mobility to changes in the selectivity of chemical reactions – all by simply enclosing the materials between a pair of mirrors. Yet, while the field has become better and better at identifying exciting polaritonic phenomena, we lack a fundamental understanding of their underlying mechanisms. The temptation is strong to explain their exotic behavior in terms of the bright, strongly coupled states that we can easily observe. However, the bright polariton states are not alone. When we peer into optical cavities with ultrafast spectroscopy, we see that they are accompanied by a host of dark states that can dominate the photophysical response. An improved model, then, frames their photophysics in terms of an interplay between bright and dark states. But to make matters worse, we find that most systems studied today don’t even fit this neat bright-dark dichotomy. The ‘grey’ states in these materials mix the properties of both manifolds, whether due to disorder or higher-order state couplings that are frequently overlooked. Our results from simple molecular dimers to complex thin-film microcavities force us to reevaluate our basic pictures of molecular photophysics and present new opportunities for materials design, from the optical generation of entangled spins to polaritonic structures with orders-of-magnitude enhanced donor-acceptor transfer.

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