| Literature DB >> 27876861 |
Zhedong Zhang1,2, Jin Wang1,3,4.
Abstract
We explore the mechanism for the long-lived quantum coherence by considering the discrete phonon modes: these vibrational modes effectively weaken the exciton-environment interaction, due to the new composite (polaron) formed by excitons and vibrons. This subsequently demonstrates the role of vibrational coherence which greatly contributes to long-lived feature of the excitonic coherence that has been observed in femtosecond experiments. The estimation of the timescale of coherence elongated by vibrational modes is given in an analytical manner. To test the validity of our theory, we study the pigment-protein complex in detail by exploring the energy transfer and coherence dynamics. The ground-state vibrational coherence generated by incoherent radiations is shown to be long-survived and is demonstrated to be significant in promoting the excitation energy transfer. This is attributed to the nonequilibriumness of the system caused by the detailed-balance-breaking, which funnels the downhill migration of excitons.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27876861 PMCID: PMC5120302 DOI: 10.1038/srep37629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The schematic of (a) our model describing exciton-phonon interaction in Eq. (1) and (b) pigment-protein complex. In (a) each well represents a site and the whole system interacts with phonon environment; In (b) the excitons in pigments couple to a vibrational mode and the radiation energy with temperature T1 is absorbed by such joint system and then dissipated into the noisy protein environment with temperature T2.
Figure 2The schematic for exciton-environment interaction.
(a) The coupling between bare exciton and environment; (b) The exciton-vibration coupling forms a new composite called polaron. In (b) the bare exciton (red) is surrounded by a cloud consisting of discrete vibrational modes (blue), which leads to the suppression of the coupling strength between exciton and environment.
Figure 3Top: Time evolution of (a) electronic wave packet, (b) excited-state vibrational wave packet and (c) ground-state vibrational wave packet. In (a,c), blue lines are for our model in non-adiabtic regime; In (b) the blue and red lines correspond to excited-state vibrational wave packets 〈A, 0|ρ|A, 1〉 and 〈B, 0|ρ|B, 1〉, respectively. Bottom: Time evolution of the excitonic coherence in delocalized basis, where blue lines correspond to non-adiabatic regime. Purple lines in (a,b,c) electronic and (d,e,f) excitonic coherences are for adiabatic regime, respectively. The parameters are: Frank-Condon factor , Δ = 0.023ε, electronic coupling J = 0.01ε, frequency of vibrational mode ħω = 1.33Δ, kT1 = 0.63ε, kT2 = 1.4Δ, Debye frequency ħω = 0.7Δ, typical decay rate hγ = 0.0005ε, reorganization energy E = 0.23Δ and t0 = 10γ−1.
Figure 4The dynamics of scaled population on pigment B for (a) including and (b) NOT including the incoherent radiation environment. In both (a,b), the blue and purple curves correspond to the non-adiabatic and adiabatic regimes, respectively. (c) Steady-state population on pigment B with respect to the temperature of low-frequency fluctuations; (d) Steady-state quantum coherence varies as a function of the temperature of low-frequency fluctuations. In (d) the purple and blue lines are for electronic (localized) and excitonic (delocalized) coherences, respectively. The parameters are the same as in Fig. 3.