4.6 Article

Atomistic non-adiabatic dynamics of the LH2 complex with a GPU-accelerated ab initio exciton model

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 19, Issue 23, Pages 14924-14936

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7cp00492c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. AMOS program within the Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division of the Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Office of Science, U. S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-76SF00515]
  2. DOE Computational Science Graduate Fellowship
  3. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  4. NSF MRI program [ACI-1429830]
  5. EPSRC for MOC's PhD studentship
  6. Royal Society
  7. Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (OAC)
  8. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1429830] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [1628000, 1361600] Funding Source: researchfish

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We recently outlined an efficient multi-tiered parallel ab initio excitonic framework that utilizes time dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) to calculate ground and excited state energies and gradients of large supramolecular complexes in atomistic detail - enabling us to undertake non-adiabatic simulations which explicitly account for the coupled anharmonic vibrational motion of all the constituent atoms in a supramolecular system. Here we apply that framework to the 27 coupled bacterio-chlorophyll-a chromophores which make up the LH2 complex, using it to compute an on-the-fly nonadiabatic surface-hopping (SH) trajectory of electronically excited LH2. Part one of this article is focussed on calibrating our ab initio exciton Hamiltonian using two key parameters: a shift delta, which corrects for the error in TDDFT vertical excitation energies; and an effective dielectric constant epsilon, which describes the average screening of the transition-dipole coupling between chromophores. Using snapshots obtained from equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations (MD) of LH2, we tune the values of both delta and epsilon through fitting to the thermally broadened experimental absorption spectrum, giving a linear absorption spectrum that agrees reasonably well with experiment. In part two of this article, we construct a time-resolved picture of the coupled vibrational and excitation energy transfer (EET) dynamics in the sub-picosecond regime following photo-excitation. Assuming Franck-Condon excitation of a narrow eigenstate band centred at 800 nm, we use surface hopping to follow a single nonadiabatic dynamics trajectory within the full eigenstate manifold. Consistent with experimental data, this trajectory gives timescales for B800-B850 population transfer (iota(B800 -> B850)) between 650-1050 fs, and B800 population decay (iota(800 ->)) between 10-50 fs. The dynamical picture that emerges is one of rapidly fluctuating LH2 eigenstates that are delocalized over multiple chromophores and undergo frequent crossing on a femtosecond timescale as a result of the atomic vibrations of the constituent chromophores. The eigenstate fluctuations arise from disorder that is driven by vibrational dynamics with multiple characteristic timescales. The scalability of our ab initio excitonic computational framework across massively parallel architectures opens up the possibility of addressing a wide range of questions, including how specific dynamical motions impact both the pathways and efficiency of electronic energy-transfer within large supramolecular systems.

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