Unravelling coherences in the FMO complex
Erling Thyrhaug, Roel Tempelaar, Marcelo Alcocer, Karel \v{Z}\'idek,, David B\'ina, Jasper Knoester, Thomas L. C. Jansen, Donatas Zigmantas

TL;DR
This study clarifies that long-lived quantum beats in the FMO complex are vibrational, not electronic, coherences, suggesting vibrational motion plays a key role in photosynthetic energy transfer.
Contribution
The paper provides experimental and theoretical evidence that electronic coherences dephase rapidly, while vibrational coherences persist, clarifying the physical origin of observed quantum beats.
Findings
Electronic coherences dephase within 240 fs at 77 K
Vibrational coherences are responsible for long-lived quantum beats
Vibronic coupling is involved in energy transfer processes
Abstract
The idea that excitonic state (electronic) coherences are of fundamental importance to natural photosynthesis gained popularity when, a decade ago, slowly dephasing quantum beats were observed in the two-dimensional electronic spectra of the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex at 77 K. These were assigned to quantum superpositions of excitonic states; a controversial interpretation, as the spectral linewidths suggested fast dephasing arising from strong interactions with the environment. While it has been pointed out that vibrational motion produces similar spectral signatures, concrete assignment of these coherences to distinct physical processes is still lacking. Here we revisit the coherence dynamics of the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex using polarization-controlled two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy, supported by theoretical modelling. We show that the long-lived quantum beats…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
