Abstract

The mechanism of excitation energy transfer in photoexcited bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) aggregates poses intriguing questions, which have important implications for the observed efficiency of photosynthesis. We investigate this process through fully quantum mechanical calculations of exciton-vibration dynamics in chains and rings of BChl a molecules, with parameters characterizing the B850 ring of the LH2 complex of photosynthetic bacteria. The calculations are performed using the modular path integral methodology, which allows the exact treatment of 50 intramolecular vibrations on each pigment using parameters obtained from spectroscopic Huang-Rhys factors with computational effort that scales linearly with aggregate length. Our results indicate that the interplay between electronic and vibrational time scales leads to the rapid suppression but not the overdamping of electronic coherence, which facilitates the spreading of excitation energy throughout the aggregate.

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