Impact of Cavity Length Non-Uniformity on Reaction Rate Extraction in Strong Coupling Experiments
Reports of altered chemical phenomena under vibrational strong coupling (VSC), including reaction rates, product distributions, intermolecular forces, and cavity-mediated vibrational energy transfer, have been met with a great deal of skepticism due to several irreproducible results and the lack of an accepted theoretical framework. In this work, we add some insight by identifying a UV-vis measurement artifact that distorts observed absorption peak positions, amplitudes, and consequently, chemical reaction rates extracted in optical microcavities. We predict and characterize the behavior of this artifact using the Transfer Matrix (TM) method and confirm its presence experimentally. We then present a correction technique whereby an effective molar absorption coefficient is assigned to an absorbing species within the cavity. These revelations have important implications for many existing examples of cavity-modified chemistry and establishing best practices for carrying out robust future investigations.
[1] Michon, M.; Simpkins, B.; Impact of Cavity Length Non-Uniformity on Reaction Rate Extraction in Strong Coupling Experiments. J Am Chem Soc 2024 (accepted manuscript)