Abstract

Photosynthetic organisms convert photoenergy to chemical energy with near-unity quantum efficiency. This occurs through charge transfer in the reaction center, which consists of two branches of pigments. In bacteria, both branches are energy-transfer pathways, but only one is also an electron transfer pathway. One barrier to a full understanding of the asymmetry is that the two branches contain excited states close in energy that produce overlapping spectroscopic peaks. We apply polarization-dependent, 2D electronic spectroscopy to the B band of the oxidized bacterial reaction center. The spectra reveal two previously unresolved peaks, corresponding to excited states localized on each of the two branches. Furthermore, a previously unknown interaction between these two states is observed on a time scale of ∼100 fs. This may indicate an alternative pathway to electron transfer for the oxidized reaction center and thus may be a mechanism to prevent energy from becoming trapped in local minima.

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