Excitation of Low-Frequency Modes and the Effects of Protein Dynamics on Spectral Densities of Bacteriochlorophyll Molecules
Sayan Maity, Tristan A. Mauck, Ulrich Kleinekath\"ofer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics accurately captures low-frequency vibrational contributions to spectral densities in light-harvesting complexes, surpassing traditional methods.
Contribution
It introduces the use of BOMD with density functional-based tight-binding to better model low-frequency vibrational effects in spectral densities of pigment molecules.
Findings
BOMD recovers low-frequency vibrational features more accurately than normal mode analysis.
Low-frequency spectral density contributions originate from both protein fluctuations and intramolecular vibrations.
Spectral densities of B850 pigments are unaffected by environmental fluctuations.
Abstract
In the theory of open quantum systems, spectral densities are key quantities for modeling the dynamics and spectroscopic properties of the system under investigation. In the case of light-harvesting complexes, they encode the frequency-dependent coupling of electronic excitations in pigment molecules to their environment, reflecting contributions from both intrinsic vibrational modes and the protein surrounding. In particular, the low-frequency components of the spectral densities are crucial for exciton transfer between pigment molecules. Apparently, slow internal modes of bacteriocholophyll molecules in the gas phase are less well represented by common force fields based on classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Here, we demonstrate that Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) based on the numerically efficient density functional-based tight-binding approach can accurately…
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