Published September 26, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Shaping excitons in light-harvesting proteins through nanoplasmonics

  • 1. Dipartimento di Chimica e Chimica Industriale, Università di Pisa, I-56124 Pisa, Italy
  • 2. Dipartimento di Scienze Chimiche, Università di Padova, I-35131 Padova, Italy

Description

Nanoplasmonics has been used to enhance molecular spectroscopic signals, with exquisite spatial resolution down to the sub-molecular scale. By means of a rigorous, state-of-the-art multiscale model based on a quantum chemical description, here we show that optimally tuned tip-shaped metal nanoparticles can selectively excite localized regions of typically coherent systems, eventually narrowing down to probing one single pigment. The well-known major light-harvesting complex LH2 of purple bacteria has been investigated because of its unique properties, as it presents both high and weak delocalization among subclusters of pigments. This finding opens the way to the direct spectroscopic investigation of quantum-based processes, such as the quantum diffusion of the excitation among the chromophores, and their external manipulation.

Notes

Citation: Chem. Sci., 2018,9, 6219-6227 CC BY-NC 3.0

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Funding

TAME-Plasmons – a Theoretical chemistry Approach to tiME-resolved molecular Plasmonics 681285
European Commission