Chemists have always relied on physical changes such as heat, cold, pressure, light, or extra chemicals to make reactions go faster or slower. However, what if you could control a reaction without touching it at all, simply by altering the invisible quantum landscape it sits in?
Researchers at the University of Rochester say this is possible, and they’ve now worked out a detailed explanation for how it happens. Their work unravels a long-standing mystery about an effect called vibrational strong coupling (VSC), where the space around molecules, rather than the molecules themselves, can influence reaction speed.
“Our work may provide the first-ever theory that describes the experimentally observed phenomena. It tells us that the quantum environment alone can influence chemistry in ways we didn’t think were possible and opens the door for new materials and technologies,” Frank Huo, one of the researchers and a professor at the University of Rochester, said.
If this effect can be used reliably, it could give chemists a new, energy-saving way to shape reactions, with potential benefits for industries ranging from drug manufacturing to advanced materials.
Realizing the potential of VSC
Back in 2016, researchers noticed something strange. If they placed reacting molecules inside an extremely tiny gap between two gold-coated mirrors. just millionths of a meter apart, the reaction’s pace changed.
This narrow gap, known as an optical microcavity, traps and shapes electromagnetic energy in a way that can interact with the natural vibrations of molecules. Somehow, these interactions could either speed up or slow down chemical changes, even though temperature and light stayed the same.
This was a surprise because standard chemical theories couldn’t explain the phenomenon. Scientists knew VSC was real as it kept showing up in experiments, but they didn’t know why it sometimes appeared, why it sometimes didn’t, or how to control it.
Over the last five years, Huo and this team have been trying to find the answers to these questions. They combined quantum mechanics with large-scale computer simulations to create a new model of how VSC works.
Their work explains that when VSC happens, certain combinations of molecular vibrations and light fields allow strong coupling to occur. This changes reaction speed because the interaction alters how energy moves between molecules and their surroundings.
The study further suggests that VSC can be controlled by adjusting the strength of the coupling in the microcavity can “dial in” a faster or slower reaction rate. Rather than changing the chemistry directly, their approach changes the energy environment, like adjusting the acoustics in a room to change how music sounds.
“This new strategy of VSC can selectively slow down or speed up a reaction, offering a paradigm shift in synthetic chemistry that could significantly impact drug development and materials synthesis,” Huo said.
A new era of clean quantum chemistry
The ability to speed up useful reactions or slow down wasteful ones without adding heat, pressure, or extra reagents could have multiple benefits.
For instance, it could dramatically reduce energy consumption in factories, make drug production more precise, cut costs in chemical manufacturing, and reduce the environmental impact of industrial processes.
However, the effect has so far only been demonstrated under carefully controlled lab conditions, and scaling it up will take further research.
Still, the Rochester team’s new theory offers a detailed blueprint of the conditions VSC needs to work and how to control it. In the long run, such insights could help chemists design reactions not only at the molecular level, but at the quantum-environment level too.
The study is published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.