Effects of Non-Adiabatic Electromagnetic Vacuum Fluctuations on Internal Conversion
Hung-Sheng Tsai, Chih-En Shen, Sheng-Chieh Hsu, and Liang-Yan Hsu*
J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 14, 25, 5924–5931 (2023).
To explore non-adiabatic effects caused by electromagnetic (EM) vacuum fluctuations in molecules, we develop a general theory of internal conversion (IC) in the framework of quantum electrodynamics and propose a new mechanism, “quantum electrodynamic internal conversion” (QED-IC). The theory allows us to compute the rates of the conventional IC and QED-IC processes at the first-principles level. Our simulations manifest that, under experimentally feasible weak light–matter coupling conditions, EM vacuum fluctuations can significantly affect IC rates by an order of magnitude. Moreover, our theory elucidates three key factors in the QED-IC mechanism: the effective mode volume, coupling-weighted normal mode alignment, and molecular rigidity. The theory successfully captures the nucleus–photon interaction in the factor “coupling-weighted normal mode alignment”. In addition, we find that molecular rigidity plays a totally different role in conventional IC versus QED-IC rates. Our study provides applicable design principles for exploiting QED effects on IC processes.