Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.102, No.5, 881-887, 1998
Femtosecond energy-transfer dynamics between bacteriochlorophylls in the B800-820 antenna complex of the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas acidophila (Strain 7750)
Femtosecond one-color pump-probe measurements were performed on the B800-820 light-harvesting antenna complex of Rhodopseudomonas acidophila, strain 7750, at room and low temperature (mainly 77 K). The isotropic and anisotropic decays obtained within the B800 band are clearly wavelength-and temperature-dependent. A fast isotropic decay component at room temperature was found to have a lifetime of 0.30 ps at 784 nm, 0.54 ps at 790 nm, and 0.75 ps at 800 nm. The interband energy-transfer time was found to be similar to 0.75 ps at room temperature, which slows down to similar to 0.90 ps at 77 K. The time-resolved anisotropy, obtained around 790 and 800 nm, exhibits a single-exponential decay feature with a depolarization time of similar to 1.1 ps at room temperature and similar to 450 fs at 77 K. Measurements within the B820 band showed a fast isotropic component having a lifetime 60-80 fs. The corresponding time-resolved anisotropy decay occurs in 100-130 fs at room temperature and similar to 240 fs at 77 K. In view of the general similarity in the energy-transfer dynamics between the B800-820 complex and other LH2 antenna, we conclude that the markedly blue-shifted B820 band has no substantial effect on the interband transfer rate.