Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy
(cryo-TEM) studies suggest
that TTBC molecules self-assemble in aqueous solution to form single-walled
tubes with a diameter of about 35 Å. In order to reveal the arrangement
and mutual orientations of the individual molecules in the tube, we
combine information from crystal structure data of this dye with a
calculation of linear absorbance and linear dichroism spectra and
molecular dynamics simulations. We start with wrapping crystal planes
in different directions to obtain tubes of suitable diameter. This
set of tube models is evaluated by comparing the resulting optical
spectra with experimental data. The tubes that can explain the spectra
are investigated further by molecular dynamics simulations, including
explicit solvent molecules. From the trajectories of the most stable
tube models, the short-range ordering of the dye molecules is extracted
and the optimization of the structure is iteratively completed. The
final structural model is a tube of rings with 6-fold rotational symmetry,
where neighboring rings are rotated by 30° and the transition
dipole moments of the chromophores form an angle of 74° with
respect to the symmetry axis of the tube. This model is in agreement
with cryo-TEM images and can explain the optical spectra, consisting
of a sharp red-shifted J-band that is polarized parallel to to the
symmetry axis of the tube and a broad blue-shifted H-band polarized
perpendicular to this axis. The general structure of the homogeneous
spectrum of this hybrid HJ-aggregate is described by an analytical
model that explains the difference in redistribution of oscillator
strength inside the vibrational manifolds of the J- and H-bands and
the relative intensities and excitation energies of those bands. In
addition to the particular system investigated here, the present methodology
can be expected to aid the structure prediction for a wide range of
self-assembled dye aggregates.
A structure-based quantitative calculation of excitonic couplings between photosynthetic pigments has to describe the dynamical polarization of the protein/solvent environment of the pigments, giving rise to reaction field and screening...
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