Abstract
Despite extensive studies, many questions remain about what structural and energetic factors give rise to the remarkable energy transport efficiency of photosynthetic light-harvesting protein complexes, owing largely to the inability to synthetically control such factors in these natural systems. Herein, we demonstrate energy transfer within a biomimetic light-harvesting complex consisting of identical chromophores attached in a circular array to a protein scaffold derived from the tobacco mosaic virus coat protein. We confirm the capability of energy transport by observing ultrafast depolarization in transient absorption anisotropy measurements and a redshift in time-resolved emission spectra in these complexes. Modeling the system with kinetic Monte Carlo simulations recapitulates the observed anisotropy decays, suggesting an inter-site hopping rate as high as 1.6 ps-1. With these simulations, we identify static disorder in orientation, site energy, and degree of coupling as key remaining factors to control to achieve long-range energy transfer in these systems. We thereby establish this system as a highly promising, bottom-up model for studying long-range energy transfer in light-harvesting protein complexes.
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CITATION STYLE
Hamerlynck, L. M., Bischoff, A. J., Rogers, J. R., Roberts, T. D., Dai, J., Geissler, P. L., … Ginsberg, N. S. (2022). Static Disorder has Dynamic Impact on Energy Transport in Biomimetic Light-Harvesting Complexes. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 126(40), 7981–7991. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c06614
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