Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 9 de 9
Filtrar
Más filtros











Base de datos
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(49)2021 12 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34845027

RESUMEN

Quantum coherences, observed as time-dependent beats in ultrafast spectroscopic experiments, arise when light-matter interactions prepare systems in superpositions of states with differing energy and fixed phase across the ensemble. Such coherences have been observed in photosynthetic systems following ultrafast laser excitation, but what these coherences imply about the underlying energy transfer dynamics remains subject to debate. Recent work showed that redox conditions tune vibronic coupling in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) pigment-protein complex in green sulfur bacteria, raising the question of whether redox conditions may also affect the long-lived (>100 fs) quantum coherences observed in this complex. In this work, we perform ultrafast two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy measurements on the FMO complex under both oxidizing and reducing conditions. We observe that many excited-state coherences are exclusively present in reducing conditions and are absent or attenuated in oxidizing conditions. Reducing conditions mimic the natural conditions of the complex more closely. Further, the presence of these coherences correlates with the vibronic coupling that produces faster, more efficient energy transfer through the complex under reducing conditions. The growth of coherences across the waiting time and the number of beating frequencies across hundreds of wavenumbers in the power spectra suggest that the beats are excited-state coherences with a mostly vibrational character whose phase relationship is maintained through the energy transfer process. Our results suggest that excitonic energy transfer proceeds through a coherent mechanism in this complex and that the coherences may provide a tool to disentangle coherent relaxation from energy transfer driven by stochastic environmental fluctuations.


Asunto(s)
Transferencia de Energía/fisiología , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/fisiología , Fotosíntesis/fisiología , Proteínas Bacterianas/química , Luz , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/metabolismo , Oxidación-Reducción , Proteínas del Complejo del Centro de Reacción Fotosintética/fisiología , Pigmentación , Teoría Cuántica , Análisis Espectral/métodos , Vibración
2.
J Phys Chem B ; 125(11): 2812-2820, 2021 03 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33728918

RESUMEN

Optical signals come from coherences between quantum states, with spectral line widths determined by the coherences' dephasing dynamics. Using a 2D electronic spectrometer, we observe weak coherence- and rephasing-time-domain signals persisting to 1 ps in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex at 77 K. These are coherences between the ground and excited states prepared after the complex interacts once or three times with light, rather than zero-quantum coherences that are more frequently investigated following two interactions. Here, we use these small but persistent signal components to isolate spectral contributions with narrowed peaks and reveal the system's eigenenergies.


Asunto(s)
Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz , Proteínas del Complejo del Centro de Reacción Fotosintética , Teoría Cuántica , Análisis Espectral
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(11)2021 03 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33688046

RESUMEN

Photosynthetic species evolved to protect their light-harvesting apparatus from photoxidative damage driven by intracellular redox conditions or environmental conditions. The Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) pigment-protein complex from green sulfur bacteria exhibits redox-dependent quenching behavior partially due to two internal cysteine residues. Here, we show evidence that a photosynthetic complex exploits the quantum mechanics of vibronic mixing to activate an oxidative photoprotective mechanism. We use two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) to capture energy transfer dynamics in wild-type and cysteine-deficient FMO mutant proteins under both reducing and oxidizing conditions. Under reducing conditions, we find equal energy transfer through the exciton 4-1 and 4-2-1 pathways because the exciton 4-1 energy gap is vibronically coupled with a bacteriochlorophyll-a vibrational mode. Under oxidizing conditions, however, the resonance of the exciton 4-1 energy gap is detuned from the vibrational mode, causing excitons to preferentially steer through the indirect 4-2-1 pathway to increase the likelihood of exciton quenching. We use a Redfield model to show that the complex achieves this effect by tuning the site III energy via the redox state of its internal cysteine residues. This result shows how pigment-protein complexes exploit the quantum mechanics of vibronic coupling to steer energy transfer.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Bacterianas/química , Transferencia de Energía , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/química , Fotosíntesis , Teoría Cuántica , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Cisteína/química , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/genética , Oxidación-Reducción , Análisis Espectral/métodos , Vibración
4.
Opt Express ; 28(22): 32869-32881, 2020 Oct 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33114962

RESUMEN

Phase stability between pulse pairs defining Fourier-transform time delays can limit resolution and complicates development and adoption of multidimensional coherent spectroscopies. We demonstrate a data processing procedure to correct the long-term phase drift of the nonlinear signal during two-dimensional (2D) experiments based on the relative phase between scattered excitation pulses and a global phasing procedure to generate fully absorptive 2D electronic spectra of wafer-scale monolayer MoS2. Our correction results in a ∼30-fold increase in effective long-term signal phase stability, from ∼λ/2 to ∼λ/70 with negligible extra experimental time and no additional optical components. This scatter-based drift correction should be applicable to other interferometric techniques as well, significantly lowering the practical experimental requirements for this class of measurements.

5.
Chem Sci ; 11(32): 8546-8557, 2020 Jul 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34123114

RESUMEN

Vibronic coupling between pigment molecules is believed to prolong coherences in photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes. Reproducing long-lived coherences using vibronically coupled chromophores in synthetic DNA constructs presents a biomimetic route to efficient artificial light harvesting. Here, we present two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectra of one monomeric Cy5 construct and two dimeric Cy5 constructs (0 bp and 1 bp between dyes) on a DNA scaffold and perform beating frequency analysis to interpret observed coherences. Power spectra of quantum beating signals of the dimers reveal high frequency oscillations that correspond to coherences between vibronic exciton states. Beating frequency maps confirm that these oscillations, 1270 cm-1 and 1545 cm-1 for the 0-bp dimer and 1100 cm-1 for the 1-bp dimer, are coherences between vibronic exciton states and that these coherences persist for ∼300 fs. Our observations are well described by a vibronic exciton model, which predicts the excitonic coupling strength in the dimers and the resulting molecular exciton states. The energy spacing between those states closely corresponds to the observed beat frequencies. MD simulations indicate that the dyes in our constructs lie largely internal to the DNA base stacking region, similar to the native design of biological light harvesting complexes. Observed coherences persist on the timescale of photosynthetic energy transfer yielding further parallels to observed biological coherences, establishing DNA as an attractive scaffold for synthetic light harvesting applications.

6.
Chem Sci ; 9(15): 3694-3703, 2018 Apr 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29780500

RESUMEN

Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) is the incoherent transfer of an electronic excitation from a donor fluorophore to a nearby acceptor. FRET has been applied as a probe of local chromophore environments and distances on the nanoscale by extrapolating transfer efficiencies from standard experimental parameters, such as fluorescence intensities or lifetimes. Competition from nonradiative relaxation processes is often assumed to be constant in these extrapolations, but in actuality, this competition depends on the donor and acceptor environments and can, therefore, be affected by conformational changes. To study the effects of nonradiative relaxation on FRET dynamics, we perform two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) on a pair of azaboraindacene (BODIPY) dyes, attached to opposite arms of a resorcin[4]arene cavitand. Temperature-induced switching between two equilibrium conformations, vase at 294 K to kite at 193 K, increases the donor-acceptor distance from 0.5 nm to 3 nm, affecting both FRET efficiency and nonradiative relaxation. By disentangling different dynamics based on lifetimes extracted from a series of 2D spectra, we independently observe nonradiative relaxation, FRET, and residual fluorescence from the donor in both vase to kite conformations. We observe changes in both FRET rate and nonradiative relaxation when the molecule switches from vase to kite, and measure a significantly greater difference in transfer efficiency between conformations than would be determined by standard lifetime-based measurements. These observations show that changes in competing nonradiative processes must be taken into account when highly accurate measurements of FRET efficiency are desired.

7.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 9(1): 89-95, 2018 Jan 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29236502

RESUMEN

Pigment-protein complexes in photosynthetic antennae can suffer oxidative damage from reactive oxygen species generated during solar light harvesting. How the redox environment of a pigment-protein complex affects energy transport on the ultrafast light-harvesting time scale remains poorly understood. Using two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy, we observe differences in femtosecond energy-transfer processes in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) antenna complex under different redox conditions. We attribute these differences in the ultrafast dynamics to changes to the system-bath coupling around specific chromophores, and we identify a highly conserved tyrosine/tryptophan chain near the chromophores showing the largest changes. We discuss how the mechanism of tyrosine/tryptophan chain oxidation may contribute to these differences in ultrafast dynamics that can moderate energy transfer to downstream complexes where reactive oxygen species are formed. These results highlight the importance of redox conditions on the ultrafast transport of energy in photosynthesis. Tailoring the redox environment may enable energy transport engineering in synthetic light-harvesting systems.


Asunto(s)
Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/química , Fotosíntesis , Proteínas del Complejo del Centro de Reacción Fotosintética/química , Transferencia de Energía , Luz , Oxidación-Reducción , Análisis Espectral
8.
ACS Nano ; 11(3): 2689-2696, 2017 03 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28195690

RESUMEN

Colloidal perovskite nanocrystals support bright, narrow PL tunable over the visible spectrum. However, bandgap tuning of these materials remains limited to laboratory-scale syntheses. In this work, we present a polar-solvent-free ligand-mediated transport synthesis of high-quality organic-inorganic perovskite nanocrystals under ambient conditions with photoluminescence quantum yields up to 97%. Our synthesis employs a ligand-mediated transport mechanism that circumvents the need for exquisite external control (e.g., temperature control, inert-gas protection, dropwise addition of reagents) required by other methods due to extremely fast reaction kinetics. In the ligand-mediated transport mechanism, multiple equilibria cooperatively dictate reaction rates and enable precise control over NC size. These small nanocrystals exhibit high photoluminescence quantum yields due to quantum confinement. Nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy experiments reveal a fluence-independent PL decay originating from exciton recombination. Two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy resolves multiple spectral features reflecting the electronic structure of the nanocrystals. The resolved features exhibit size-dependent spectral positions, further indicating the synthesized nanocrystals are quantum-confined.

9.
ACS Photonics ; 3(12): 2445-2452, 2016 Dec 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28451625

RESUMEN

We propose here optical resonance imaging (ORI), a direct optical analog to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The proposed pulse sequence for ORI maps space to time and recovers an image from a heterodyne-detected third-order nonlinear photon echo measurement. As opposed to traditional photon echo measurements, the third pulse in the ORI pulse sequence has significant pulse-front tilt that acts as a temporal gradient. This gradient couples space to time by stimulating the emission of a photon echo signal from different lateral spatial locations of a sample at different times, providing a widefield ultrafast microscopy. We circumvent the diffraction limit of the optics by mapping the lateral spatial coordinate of the sample with the emission time of the signal, which can be measured to high precision using interferometric heterodyne detection. This technique is thus an optical analog of MRI, where magnetic-field gradients are used to localize the spin-echo emission to a point below the diffraction limit of the radio-frequency wave used. We calculate the expected ORI signal using 15 fs pulses and 87° of pulse-front tilt, collected using f/2 optics and find a two-point resolution 275 nm using 800 nm light that satisfies the Rayleigh criterion. We also derive a general equation for resolution in optical resonance imaging that indicates that there is a possibility of superresolution imaging using this technique. The photon echo sequence also enables spectroscopic determination of the input and output energy. The technique thus correlates the input energy with the final position and energy of the exciton.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA