Archive 2018

Room: Seminar Room IV, O1.111 Host: Angel Rubio

A time domain perspective on electron-boson coupling in superconducting materials

MPSD Seminar
Experiments in the time domain allow to determine the electron-boson coupling strength by analyzing the second moment of the Eliashberg function α2∙F(ω) using the relaxation time constant of thermalized, hot electrons after optical excitation. [1] While this approach works well for conventional superconducting materials, it is under discussion for unconventional superconductors due to competing electron and boson dynamics on similar time scales. [2,3] [more]

Nano Surface Science and Engineering for Energy Conversion and Diamond Transistors

MPSD Seminar
Nano science and technology offer a vast and fascinating playground
to explore the novel physiochemical properties of nanomaterials with the development for various applications including energy conversion and electronics. [more]

An introduction to coupled-cluster theory, and recent developments in quantum embedding

MPSD Seminar
Coupled-cluster theory has become a key tool in quantum chemistry, providing gold-standard accuracy for ground- and excited-state energetics, and other properties. [more]

Resonant Thermalization of periodically driven strongly correlated electrons

MPSD Seminar

Numerically exact full counting statistics of the Anderson impurity model

MPSD Seminar
The full characterization of charge transfer processes in molecular junctions requires techniques for evaluating not only the first and second moments of charge currents, but also higher-order statistical cumulants of the charge transfer process. The complete set of cumulants gives access to the full counting statistics (FCS) through the so-called generating function [1]. [more]

Polariton photophysics and photochemistry: theoretical perspectives

CFEL Theory Seminar
Organic molecules interact strongly with confined electromagnetic fields in plasmonicarrays or optical microcavities owing to their bright transition dipole moments. Thisinteraction gives rise to molecular polaritons, hybrid light-matter quasiparticles.Molecular polaritonics opens new room-temperature opportunities for the nontrivialcontrol of energy transport in the nano and mesoscales and modification of physicochemicalproperties of molecular assemblies. In this talk, I’ll showcase some of theseopportunities that we have been theoretically exploring in the past few years within thecontext of physical chemistry. I’ll start by briefly mentioning our work on topologicallynontrivial phases in excitonic and polaritonic systems of organic dye molecules [1,2].Next, I will discuss recent work on how polaritons can enhance singlet-fissionprocesses [3] or how excitation energy can be transferred across mesoscopicdistances of hundreds of nanometers to micron lengthscales [4]. If time permits, I’llconclude by explaining what we can learn about molecular polaritons using twodimensionalspectroscopy [5,6].[1] J. Yuen-Zhou et al., Nature Mater. 13, 1026 (2014).[2] J. Yuen-Zhou et al., Plexcitons: Dirac points andtopological modes, Nat. Commun. 7, 11783 (2016).[3] L. A. Martínez-Martínez, et al., Polariton-assistedsinglet fission in acene aggregates, under review in J.Phys. Chem. Lett., arXiV:1711.11264.[4] M. Du et al., Polariton-assisted remote energy transfer(PARET), under review in Chem. Sci., arXiv:1711.11576.[5] B. Xiang et al., Revealing hidden vibration polaritoninteractions by 2D IR spectroscopy, under review in Proc.Nat. Acad. Sci., arXiv:1711.11222.[6] R. F. Ribeiro et al., Theory for nonlinear spectroscopyof vibrational polaritons, submitted to J. Phys. Chem.Lett., arXiv:1711.11576. [more]

Emanuele Dalla Torre - From Floquet engineering to prethermalization of peridically driven systems

MPSD Seminar
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