This paper presents a quantum-mechanical study of electronic energy transfer (EET) coupling on over 100
pairs of chromophores taken from photosynthetic light-harvesting antenna proteins. Solvation effects due to
the protein, intrinsic waters, and surrounding medium are analyzed in terms of screening and reaction field
contributions using a model developed recently that combines a linear response approach with the polarizable
continuum model (PCM). We find that the screening of EET interactions is quite insensitive to the quantum-mechanical treatment adopted. In contrast, it is greatly dependent on the geometrical details (distance, shape,
and orientation) of the chromophore pair considered. We demonstrate that implicit (reaction field) as well as
screening effects are dictated mainly by the optical dielectric properties of the host medium, while the effect
of the static properties is substantially less important. The empirical distance-dependent screening function
we proposed in a recent letter (Scholes, G. D.; Curutchet, C.; Mennucci, B.; Cammi, R.; Tomasi, J. J. Phys.
Chem. B 2007, 111, 6978−6982) is analyzed and compared to other commonly used screening factors. In
addition, we show that implicit medium effects on the coupling, resulting from changes in the transition
densities upon solvation, are strongly dependent on the particular system considered, thus preventing the
possibility of defining a general empirical expression for such an effect