Operational bounds and diagnostics for coherence in energy transfer
Julia Liebert, Gregory D. Scholes

TL;DR
This paper introduces a resource theoretic framework to quantify how initial quantum coherence affects energy transfer efficiency in light-harvesting systems, providing bounds and diagnostics to assess coherence's operational role.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel resource impact functional approach to bound coherence effects on transport, applicable to various models, and establish criteria to distinguish meaningful coherence contributions.
Findings
Bounds on coherence-induced changes in signals and transport metrics.
Criteria to identify when coherence significantly enhances transfer efficiency.
A Lieb-Robinson-type bound limiting distant coherence influence.
Abstract
Excitation energy transfer in light-harvesting aggregates is highly efficient, yet whether quantum coherence plays an operational role in transport remains debated. A central challenge is that coherence is usually inferred from spectroscopic signatures, whereas transport performance is assessed through specific observables and depends on both the open system dynamics and the initial state preparation. Here we develop a resource theoretic approach that quantifies the maximum change that initial site-basis coherence can induce in a chosen readout under fixed reduced dynamics. The central quantity is the resource impact functional, which yields state independent, readout specific bounds on coherence-induced changes in signals and transport figures of merit. We apply the framework to two models. For a donor-acceptor dimer, we analyse coherence sensitivity across coupling and bath-timescale…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Strong Light-Matter Interactions · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
