4.8 Article

Interplay between structural hierarchy and exciton diffusion in artificial light harvesting

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-12345-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dieptestrategie Programme of the Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials (University of Groningen, the Netherlands)
  2. European Union [722651]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [614623]
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [BR 423942615]
  5. Bavarian State Ministry of Science, Research, and the Arts-Collaborative Research Network Solar Technologies Go Hybrid
  6. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [722651] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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Unraveling the nature of energy transport in multi-chromophoric photosynthetic complexes is essential to extract valuable design blueprints for light-harvesting applications. Long-range exciton transport in such systems is facilitated by a combination of delocalized excitation wavefunctions (excitons) and exciton diffusion. The unambiguous identification of the exciton transport is intrinsically challenging due to the system's sheer complexity. Here we address this challenge by employing a spectroscopic lab-on-a-chip approach: ultrafast coherent two-dimensional spectroscopy and microfluidics working in tandem with theoretical modeling. We show that at low excitation fluences, the outer layer acts as an exciton antenna supplying excitons to the inner tube, while under high excitation fluences the former converts its functionality into an exciton annihilator which depletes the exciton population prior to any exciton transfer. Our findings shed light on the excitonic trajectories across different subunits of a multi-layered artificial light-harvesting complex and underpin their great potential for directional excitation energy transport.

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