Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5403987 Journal of Luminescence 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The electron-phonon and vibronic couplings governing the spectral properties have been studied in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a)-protein complex at 4.5 K using a spectrally selective difference fluorescence line-narrowing technique. The complex is a part of the light-harvesting system of green photosynthetic bacteria. Its lowest-energy absorption band, peaking at 826 nm and responsible for the fluorescence, is believed to be due to Qy transitions of largely isolated molecules. One of the main merits of the used method compared with the more common fluorescence line narrowing is that the zero-phonon lines (ZPL) resonant with the excitation laser can be accurately measured, allowing precise determination of the Huang-Rhys (HR) factors, the main characteristics of the linear electron-phonon and vibronic coupling strengths. Over 60 individual vibrational modes of intra- and intermolecular origin have been resolved in the energy range of 45-1600 cm−1. The small HR factors for these modes, ranging between 0.001 and 0.018, add up to a value of Svib=0.38±0.07. The effective HR factor for the phonons, Sph, was found clearly wavelength-dependent, varying from ∼0.7 at short wavelengths to ∼0.3 at the long-wavelength tail of the absorption spectrum. Coupling between the BChl a molecules is likely responsible for this wavelength dependence.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
, ,