4.8 Article

DNA scaffold supports long-lived vibronic coherence in an indodicarbocyanine (Cy5) dimer

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue 32, Pages 8546-8557

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0sc01127d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship Program [N00014-16-1-2513, N00014-15-1-0048]
  2. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) [FA9550-18-1-0099]
  3. NSF [1900359]
  4. NSF MRSEC grant programs at the University of Chicago [DMR-1420709]
  5. Department of Defense (DoD)
  6. AFOSR, through the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship Program [32 CFR 168a]
  7. Arnold O. Beckman Postdoctoral Fellowship - Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation
  8. NSF-GRFP program
  9. Laboratory-University Research Initiative (LUCI)
  10. Office of Naval Research
  11. Division Of Chemistry
  12. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1900359] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Vibronic coupling between pigment molecules is believed to prolong coherences in photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes. Reproducing long-lived coherences using vibronically coupled chromophores in synthetic DNA constructs presents a biomimetic route to efficient artificial light harvesting. Here, we present two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectra of one monomeric Cy5 construct and two dimeric Cy5 constructs (0 bp and 1 bp between dyes) on a DNA scaffold and perform beating frequency analysis to interpret observed coherences. Power spectra of quantum beating signals of the dimers reveal high frequency oscillations that correspond to coherences between vibronic exciton states. Beating frequency maps confirm that these oscillations, 1270 cm(-1)and 1545 cm(-1)for the 0-bp dimer and 1100 cm(-1)for the 1-bp dimer, are coherences between vibronic exciton states and that these coherences persist for similar to 300 fs. Our observations are well described by a vibronic exciton model, which predicts the excitonic coupling strength in the dimers and the resulting molecular exciton states. The energy spacing between those states closely corresponds to the observed beat frequencies. MD simulations indicate that the dyes in our constructs lie largely internal to the DNA base stacking region, similar to the native design of biological light harvesting complexes. Observed coherences persist on the timescale of photosynthetic energy transfer yielding further parallels to observed biological coherences, establishing DNA as an attractive scaffold for synthetic light harvesting applications.

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