4.8 Article

Biomimetic Nanoarchitectures for Light Harvesting: Self-Assembly of Pyropheophorbide-Peptide Conjugates

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 11, Issue 19, Pages 7972-7980

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c02138

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Funding

  1. MIUR through the PRIN projects [2015XBZ5YA, 2017A4XRCA]

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The biological light-harvesting process offers an unlimited source of inspiration. The high level of control, adaptation capability, and efficiency challenge humankind to create artificial biomimicking nanoarchitectures with the same performances to respond to our energy needs. Here, in the extensive search for design principles at the base of efficient artificial light harvesters, an approach based on self-assembly of pigment-peptide conjugates is proposed. The solvent-driven and controlled aggregation of the peptide moieties promotes the formation of a dense network of interacting pigments, giving rise to an excitonic network characterized by intense and spectrally wide absorption bands. The ultrafast dynamics of the nanosystems studied through two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy reveals that the excitation energy is funneled in an ultrafast time range (hundreds of femtoseconds) to a manifold of long-living dark states, thus suggesting the considerable potentiality of the systems as efficient harvesters.

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