Electronic coherence effects in photosynthetic light harvesting (original) (raw)
Photosynthetic light harvesting is a paradigmatic example for quantum effects in biology. In this work, we review studies on quantum coherence effects in the LH2 antenna complex from purple bacteria to demonstrate how quantum mechanical rules play important roles in the speedup of excitation energy transfer, the stabilization of electronic excitations, and the robustness of light harvesting in photosynthesis. Subsequently, we present our recent theoretical studies on exciton dynamical localization and excitonic coherence generation in photosynthetic systems. We apply a variational-polaron approach to investigate decoherence of exciton states induced by dynamical fluctuations due to system-environment interactions. The results indicate that the dynamical localization of photoexcitations in photosynthetic complexes is significant and imperative for a complete understanding of coherence and excitation dynamics in photosynthesis. Moreover, we use a simple model to investigate quantum coherence effects in intercomplex excitation energy transfer in natural photosynthesis, with a focus on the likelihoods of generating excitonic coherences during the process. Our model simulations reveal that excitonic coherence between acceptor exciton states and transient nonlocal quantum correlation between distant pairs of chromophores can be generated through intercomplex energy transfer. Finally, we discuss the implications of these theoretical works and important open questions that remain to be answered.
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