Abstract

Impulsively generated wavepackets can report on vibronic couplings underlying ultrafast electronic relaxation. Coherence maps (CMs) in multidimensional spectroscopy resolve beating amplitudes of such wavepackets as two-dimensional contour maps. A precise understanding of how these wavepackets manifest spectroscopically is vital for unambiguously deciphering their mechanistic significance and establishing CMs as a powerful tool for guiding the synthetic design of functional vibronic couplings. Here we take a step in this direction. We establish physically distinct origins of recently reported apparent similarities between diagonal node-like CM lineshapes in bacteriochlorophyll monomers and multichromophoric photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs). The former arise when vibrational wavepackets survive on both ground and excited electronic states, while nodal lines in RCs arise when vibrational wavepackets that do not participate in energy transfer are coherently transferred to the acceptor. We resolve recent spectroscopic observations and illustrate new mechanistic insights gained by connecting microscopic interference between electronic relaxation pathways and observed CMs.

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