Controlling Energy Flow in Biological Chromophores with Light–Matter Hybrid States

Mentors

Project Description

Light drives life. From photosynthesis in plants to vision in animals, biological systems rely on exquisitely tuned photophysical processes to convert and transport energy. This REU project will introduce undergraduate students to the emerging field of polariton biophotonics, where confined light inside an optical cavity strongly interacts with molecules to create new hybrid light–matter states called polaritons. These hybrid states can fundamentally reshape how energy flows through molecular and biological systems.

In the Son group, we investigate how strong light–matter coupling can be used to control molecular photophysics. When molecules such as chlorophylls or phthalocyanines are placed inside an optical microcavity, their electronic structure is modified by interaction with confined photons. This interaction can alter excited-state lifetimes, energy transfer pathways, and relaxation dynamics. In this REU project, the student will explore how polariton formation influences the energy relaxation dynamics of biologically relevant chromophores, including chlorophyll derivatives. The work connects directly to biophotonics by probing and engineering light-driven processes central to photosynthesis and bio-inspired energy conversion.