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. 2002;71(1-2):19-32.
doi: 10.1023/A:1014995328869.

Exciton dynamics in the chlorosomal antenna of the green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus: experimental and theoretical studies of femtosecond pump-probe spectra

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Exciton dynamics in the chlorosomal antenna of the green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus: experimental and theoretical studies of femtosecond pump-probe spectra

Andrey Yakovlev et al. Photosynth Res. 2002.

Abstract

Femtosecond absorption difference spectra were measured for chlorosomes isolated from the green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus at room temperature. Using the relative difference absorption of the oligomeric BChl c and monomeric BChl a bands, the size of a unit BChl c aggregate as well as the exciton coherence size were estimated for the chlorosomal BChl c antenna under study. A quantitative fit of the data was obtained within the framework of the exciton model proposed before [Fetisova et al. (1996) Biophys J 71: 995-1010]. The size of the antenna unit was found to be 24 exciton-coupled BChl c molecules. The anomalously high bleaching value of the oligomeric B740 band with respect to the monomeric B795 band provided the direct evidence for a high degree of exciton delocalization in the chlorosomal B740 BChl c antenna. The effective delocalization size of individual exciton wavefunctions (the thermally averaged inverse participation ratio) in the chlorosomal BChl c antenna is 9.5, whereas the steady-state wavepacket corresponds to the coherence size (the inverse participation ratio of the density matrix) of 7.4 at room temperature.

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