2 research outputs found
Impact of nuclear vibrations on van der Waals and Casimir interactions at zero and finite temperature
Van der Waals (vdW) and Casimir interactions depend crucially on material
properties and geometry, especially at molecular scales, and temperature can
produce noticeable relative shifts in interaction characteristics. Despite
this, common treatments of these interactions ignore electromagnetic
retardation, atomism, or contributions of collective mechanical vibrations
(phonons) to the infrared response, which can interplay with temperature in
nontrivial ways. We present a theoretical framework for computing
electromagnetic interactions among molecular structures, accounting for their
geometry, electronic delocalization, short-range interatomic correlations,
dissipation, and phonons at atomic scales, along with long-range
electromagnetic interactions among themselves or in the vicinity of continuous
macroscopic bodies. We find that in carbon allotropes, particularly fullerenes,
carbyne wires, and graphene sheets, phonons can couple strongly with long-range
electromagnetic fields, especially at mesoscopic scales (nanometers), to create
delocalized phonon polaritons that significantly modify the infrared molecular
response. These polaritons especially depend on the molecular dimensionality
and dissipation, and in turn affect the vdW interaction free energies of these
bodies above a macroscopic gold surface, producing nonmonotonic power laws and
nontrivial temperature variations at nanometer separations that are within the
reach of current Casimir force experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures (3 single-column, 1 double-column), 2 appendice
Impact of nuclear vibrations on van der Waals and Casimir interactions at zero and finite temperature
Van der Waals interactions in atomistic systems depend strongly on temperature, vibrational effects, and dimensionality.</jats:p
