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Ab initio analysis of spectral signatures in molecular aggregates

Plants and bacteria both have specialized light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes, composed of a network of chromophores encompassed by a protein scaffold, that are involved in photosynthesis. While chromophore, as well as protein, composition and arrangement vary in these light-harvesting complexes, chromophores transfer energy as molecular excitation energy through their complex multi-chromophoric network with near perfect efficiency. Understanding the efficiency of this excitation energy transfer process has been the focus of many interdisciplinary studies. By elucidating the mechanisms involved in efficient excitation energy transfer in biological systems, we are able to guide the design of novel organic materials for their application in photovoltaic systems.
Interdisciplinary studies of light-harvesting biological systems leverage advanced spectroscopic techniques and theoretical models to help explain the interaction be- tween excited electronic states. Difficulties in assigning the origin of spectral features in spectroscopy experiments arise from both homogeneous and inhomogeneous effects. Various computational studies have been able to provide theoretical models that help disentangle these effects and provide insight into the origin of some these spectral features.
In this work, we present a computational approach that is used to calculate an ensemble of model Hamiltonians for a light-harvesting pigment-protein complex found in algae. To verify the reliability of our model, we compare various computed spec- tra with experimental measurements. Next, we extend our computational approach for parameterizing an ensemble of Hamiltonians for two configurationally unique or- ganic dimers. Finally, we examine the error of some of the approximations made while partitioning “system” and “bath” degrees of freedom when computing molecu- lar properties. Using these methods we are able to provide mechanistic interpretations and explanations of spectral signatures observed in various linear and nonlinear ex- perimental spectra.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/43945
Date28 February 2022
CreatorsKumar, Manav
ContributorsCoker, David F.
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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