Abstract

When an organic molecule is placed inside a plasmonic cavity formed by two metallic nanoparticles (MNP) under illumination, the electronic excitations of the molecule couple to the plasmonic electromagnetic modes of the cavity, inducing new hybrid light-matter states called polaritons. Atomistic abinitio methods accurately describe the coupling between MNPs and molecules at the nanometer scale and allow us to analyze how atomistic features influence the interaction. In this work, we study the optical response of a porphine molecule coupled to a silver nanoparticle dimer from first principles, within the linear-response time-dependent density functional theory framework, using the recently developed Python Numeric Atomic Orbitals implementation to compute the optical excitations. The optical spectra show the splitting of the resonances of the plasmonic dimer and the molecule into two distinct polaritons, a characteristic feature of the strong light-matter coupling regime. Our results stress the importance of atomistic features, such as the gap configuration in determining the plasmon-exciton coupling strength and in the emergence of molecule-mediated charge-transfer plasmon (CTP) resonances at lower frequencies. Moreover, we show that the strength of the CTP resonance can be tuned by shifting the alignment of the molecular energy levels with respect to the Fermi level of the MNPs.

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