50 research outputs found
Molecular emission near metal interfaces: the polaritonic regime
The strong coupling of a dense layer of molecular excitons with
surface-plasmon modes in a metal gives rise to polaritons (hybrid light-matter
states) called plexcitons. Surface plasmons cannot directly emit into (or be
excited by) free-space photons due to the fact that energy and momentum
conservation cannot be simultaneously satisfied in photoluminescence. Most
plexcitons are also formally non-emissive, even though they can radiate via
molecules upon localization due to disorder and decoherence. However, a
fraction of them are bright even in the presence of such deleterious processes.
In this letter, we theoretically discuss the superradiant emission properties
of these bright plexcitons, which belong to the upper energy branch and reveal
huge photoluminescence enhancements compared to bare excitons. Our study
generalizes the well-known problem of molecular emission next to a metal
interface to collective molecular states and provides new design principles for
the control of photophysical properties of molecular aggregates using
polaritonic strategies.Comment: Replaced previous version, noticing that van Hove anomalies are only
observed in the direct and reflected contributions of photoluminescence, but
they cancel out when added up in the total photoluminescence. The correct
phenomenology is that enhancements of photoluminescence are still huge (not
infinite) and are near (not exactly at) the critical poin
Exciton transport in thin-film cyanine dye J-aggregates
We present a theoretical model for the study of exciton dynamics in
J-aggregated monolayers of fluorescent dyes. The excitonic evolution is
described by a Monte-Carlo wave function approach which allows for a unified
description of the quantum (ballistic) and classical (diffusive) propagation of
an exciton on a lattice in different parameter regimes. The transition between
the ballistic and diffusive regime is controlled by static and dynamic
disorder. As an example, the model is applied to three cyanine dye
J-aggregates: TC, TDBC, and U3. Each of the molecule-specific structure and
excitation parameters are estimated using time-dependent density functional
theory. The exciton diffusion coefficients are calculated and analyzed for
different degrees of film disorder and are correlated to the physical
properties and the structural arrangement of molecules in the aggregates.
Further, exciton transport is anisotropic and dependent on the initial exciton
energy. The upper-bound estimation of the exciton diffusion length in the TDBC
thin-film J-aggregate is of the order of hundreds of nanometers, which is in
good qualitative agreement with the diffusion length estimated from
experiments.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
Optical Spectra of p-Doped PEDOT Nano-Aggregates Provide Insight into the Material Disorder
Highly doped Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) or PEDOT is a conductive
polymer with a wide range of applications in energy conversion due to its ease
of processing, optical properties and high conductivity. The latter is
influenced by processing conditions, including formulation, annealing, and
solvent treatment of the polymer, which also affects the polymer arrangement.
Here we show that the analysis of the optical spectra of PEDOT domains reveals
the nature and magnitude of the structural disorder in the material. In
particular, the optical spectra of objects on individual domains can be used
for the elucidation of the molecular disorder in oligomer arrangement which is
a key factor affecting the conductivity
Photonics meets excitonics: natural and artificial molecular aggregates
Organic molecules store the energy of absorbed light in the form of charge-neutral molecular excitations -- Frenkel excitons. Usually, in amorphous organic materials, excitons are viewed as quasiparticles, localized on single molecules, which diffuse randomly through the structure. However, the picture of incoherent hopping is not applicable to some classes of molecular aggregates -- assemblies of molecules that have strong near field interaction between electronic excitations in the individual subunits. Molecular aggregates can be found in nature, in photosynthetic complexes of plants and bacteria, and they can also be produced artificially in various forms including quasi-one dimensional chains, two-dimensional films, tubes, etc. In these structures light is absorbed collectively by many molecules and the following dynamics of molecular excitation possesses coherent properties. This energy transfer mechanism, mediated by the coherent exciton dynamics, resembles the propagation of electromagnetic waves through a structured medium on the nanometer scale. The absorbed energy can be transferred resonantly over distances of hundreds of nanometers before exciton relaxation occurs. Furthermore, the spatial and energetic landscape of molecular aggregates can enable the funneling of the exciton energy to a small number of molecules either within or outside the aggregate. In this review we establish a bridge between the fields of photonics and excitonics by describing the present understanding of exciton dynamics in molecular aggregates.Chemistry and Chemical Biolog
Blood flow-induced Notch activation and endothelial migration enable vascular remodeling in zebrafish embryos.
Arteries and veins are formed independently by different types of endothelial cells (ECs). In vascular remodeling, arteries and veins become connected and some arteries become veins. It is unclear how ECs in transforming vessels change their type and how fates of individual vessels are determined. In embryonic zebrafish trunk, vascular remodeling transforms arterial intersegmental vessels (ISVs) into a functional network of arteries and veins. Here we find that, once an ISV is connected to venous circulation, venous blood flow promotes upstream migration of ECs that results in displacement of arterial ECs by venous ECs, completing the transformation of this ISV into a vein without trans-differentiation of ECs. Arterial blood flow initiated in two neighboring ISVs prevents their transformation into veins by activating Notch signaling in ECs. Together, different responses of ECs to arterial and venous blood flow lead to formation of a balanced network with equal numbers of arteries and veins
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Memory-Assisted Exciton Diffusion in the Chlorosome Light-Harvesting Antenna of Green Sulfur Bacteria
Chlorosomes are likely the largest and most efficient natural light-harvesting photosynthetic antenna systems. They are composed of large numbers of bacteriochlorophylls organized into supramolecular aggregates. We explore the microscopic origin of the fast excitation energy transfer in the chlorosome using the recently resolved structure and atomistic-detail simulations. Despite the dynamical disorder effects on the electronic transitions of the bacteriochlorophylls, our simulations show that the exciton delocalizes over the entire aggregate in about 200 fs. The memory effects associated to the dynamical disorder assist the exciton diffusion through the aggregates and enhance the diffusion coefficients as a factor of 2 as compared to the model without memory. Furthermore, exciton diffusion in the chlorosome is found to be highly anisotropic with the preferential transfer toward the baseplate, which is the next functional element in the photosynthetic system.Chemistry and Chemical Biolog
Theoretical characterization of excitation energy transfer in chlorosome light-harvesting antennae from green sulfur bacteria
We present a theoretical study of excitation dynamics in the chlorosome antenna complex of green photosynthetic bacteria based on a recently proposed model for the molecular assembly. Our model for the excitation energy transfer (EET) throughout the antenna combines a stochastic time propagation of the excitonic wave function with molecular dynamics simulations of the supramolecular structure, and electronic structure calculations of the excited states. We characterized the optical properties of the chlorosome with absorption, circular dichroism and fluorescence polarization anisotropy decay spectra. The simulation results for the excitation dynamics reveal a detailed picture of the EET in the chlorosome. Coherent energy transfer is significant only for the first 50 fs after the initial excitation, and the wavelike motion of the exciton is completely damped at 100 fs. Characteristic time constants of incoherent energy transfer, subsequently, vary from 1 ps to several tens of ps. We assign the time scales of the EET to specific physical processes by comparing our results with the data obtained from time-resolved spectroscopy experiments.Chemistry and Chemical BiologyPhysic