8 research outputs found
Distinguishing the roles of energy funnelling and delocalization in photosynthetic light harvesting
Photosynthetic complexes improve the transfer of excitation energy from
peripheral antennas to reaction centers in several ways. In particular, a
downward energy funnel can direct excitons in the right direction, while
coherent excitonic delocalization can enhance transfer rates through the
cooperative phenomenon of supertransfer. However, isolating the role of purely
coherent effects is difficult because any change to the delocalization also
changes the energy landscape. Here, we show that the relative importance of the
two processes can be determined by comparing the natural light-harvesting
apparatus with counterfactual models in which the delocalization and the energy
landscape are altered. Applied to the example of purple bacteria, our approach
shows that although supertransfer does enhance the rates somewhat, the
energetic funnelling plays the decisive role. Because delocalization has a
minor role (and is sometimes detrimental), it is most likely not adaptive,
being a side-effect of the dense chlorophyll packing that evolved to increase
light absorption per reaction center