Impact of environmentally induced fluctuations on quantum mechanically mixed electronic and vibrational pigment states in photosynthetic energy transfer and 2D electronic spectra
Yuta Fujihashi, Graham R. Fleming, Akihito Ishizaki

TL;DR
This study investigates how environmental fluctuations influence vibronic excitons in photosynthetic complexes, revealing that such quantum mixtures are temperature-dependent and may not significantly affect energy transfer despite their spectral signatures.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed numerical analysis showing environmental fluctuations impact vibronic excitons differently at cryogenic and physiological temperatures, clarifying their role in energy transfer.
Findings
Vibronic excitons are robust at cryogenic temperatures despite fluctuations.
At physiological temperatures, fluctuations suppress electronic-vibrational mixing.
Long-lived spectral beating can occur without significant influence on energy transfer.
Abstract
Recently, nuclear vibrational contribution signatures in 2D electronic spectroscopy have attracted considerable interest, in particular as regards interpretation of the oscillatory transients observed in light-harvesting complexes. These transients have dephasing times that persist for much longer than theoretically predicted electronic coherence lifetime. As a plausible explanation for this long-lived spectral beating in 2D electronic spectra, quantum-mechanically mixed electronic and vibrational states (vibronic excitons) were proposed by Christensson et al. [J. Phys. Chem. B 116, 7449 (2012)] and have since been explored. In this work, we address a dimer which produces little beating of electronic origin in the absence of vibronic contributions, and examine the impact of protein-induced fluctuations upon electronic-vibrational quantum mixtures by calculating the electronic energy…
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