NRC team uses new Quantum Technology to control
molecules
A research team at the National Research Council
Canada (Ottawa) has developed a new quantum technology which uses
laser pulses to control quantum processes.
The method, which is described in the October 13th
web release by the world's leading scientific journal, Science, was
illustrated by changing the outcome a chemical reaction.
Quantum technologies make use of the molecular
scale properties of matter. At this scale, which is different from our
everyday world, matter behaves according to the rules of quantum
mechanics. Although the rules are well understood, the tools required
to control quantum processes are still under development. Quantum
technologies aim to manipulate molecular scale behaviour, in a way not
usually seen in nature, for fundamentally new applications.
For example, methods to implement quantum information/computation (i.e.
computers based upon quantum rules) are the subject of an
international race to harness the power of this new technology.
Another example of quantum technology is the control of chemical
reactions using laser light, the example chosen by the NRC researchers
to illustrate their new approach.
A chemical reaction, in which a starting molecule is converted to a
product, follows path that seems to a molecule like a hill it must 'ski'
down, as shown in the figure. Here a molecule would normally react by
heading down the hill towards valley B. The NRC team describes an
experiment that is analogous to the 'Labyrinth' game in which a player
controls the tilt of a board in order to guide a steel ball through a
maze of holes; in this case a molecular scale game. The knob the
researchers used is an ultrafast laser pulse (shown here as a wiggly
black arrow) which re-shapes the hill (or tilts the board) as the
molecule is sliding down the slope, using an interaction called the
Dynamic Stark Effect. In this molecular 'Labyrinth' game, the
interaction deflects the reacting molecule towards valley A rather
than valley B. The breaking of the chemical bond associated with this
process is illustrated on the left. A key aspect of the NRC approach
is that the molecule does not absorb the laser light during this
re-shaping. The absorption of the laser light would be equivalent to
moving the molecule to a different hill instead of tilting the one it
is on. This would generally lead to products other than the A or B
products indicated in the figure. The avoidance of light absorption is
important because different molecules absorb different colours of
light, so it is impossible to find an absorption method that works the
same for all molecules. Thus, the new NRC method of 'tilting the hill',
based on the Dynamic Stark Effect, should be applicable to control of
a broad range of quantum processes.
According to Albert Stolow, the NRC team leader, the tool used to
alter molecular landscapes has implications beyond the control of
chemical reactions. One example already mentioned is in the area of
quantum information either to directly encode molecular scale
information or to control molecular scale switches. Another
application is in developing novel forms of optical microscopy of live
cells, where quantum control methods can be used to sharpen images,
enhance sensitivity and perhaps even perform molecular scale surgery
on individual cells. The electric interaction underlying the NRC
technique is an essential tool on the quantum mechanic's workbench.
Its application to science and technology could reach deep into the
quantum world of the ultrasmall.
Source
/ Further
information:
-
Publishing date: 13-Oct-2006
-
Benjamin J. Sussman, Dave Townsend, Misha Yu.
Ivanov, Albert Stolow -
Dynamic Stark Control of Photochemical Processes -
Science 13 October 2006: Vol. 314. no. 5797, pp. 278 - 281 -
DOI: 10.1126/science.1132289
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