We present the first report of highly efficient persistent spectral hole-burning in active (oxygen-evolving)
Photosystem II (PSII) preparations. Samples are poised in the S1 state of the Kok cycle, with the primary
quinone (QA) either neutral or photoreduced to QA
- via a low-temperature pre-illumination. Remarkably efficient
hole-burning is observed within the chlorophyll Q
y
(0,0) absorption envelope in the wavelength range of 676−695 nm. The hole-burning action spectrum of a sample poised in the S1(QA
-) state is dominated by a narrow
feature (∼40 cm-1) at 684 nm, where hole depths of 30% are attainable. The photoproduct for spectral holes
burnt in this region is distributed across the ∼50 cm-1 absorption feature centered at 683.5 nm, independent
of the excitation wavelength within this band. Saturated hole-burning experiments indicate weak electron−phonon coupling near 684 nm but stronger coupling for holes burnt near 690 nm. Selective excitation near
690 nm of samples in the S1(QA) state also results in efficient QA
- formation. Negligible hole-burning activity
is observed at higher energies (<676 nm). Holewidths extrapolated to zero fluence and temperature are 2.0
± 0.5 GHz near 685 nm for PSII samples in the S1(QA
-) state. Holewidths are twice as large and hole-burning quantum efficiencies are up to an order of magnitude greater (approaching 1%) for samples in the
S1(QA) state. We ascribe hole-burning near 684 nm to slow (40−210 ps) excitation transfer from a CP43
chlorophyll to the PSII reaction center, and we ascribe hole-burning at ∼690 nm to excitation transfer from
a chlorophyll in CP47. The unusually high hole-burning efficiency that we observe is attributed to a mechanism
that involves charge separation in the reaction center that follows excitation transfer from these “slow transfer”
states in CP43 and CP47. A key result of this work is the observation that selective excitation in the range
685−695 nm leads to efficient charge separation, as indicated by QA
- formation. This indicates the presence
of (a relatively weak) P680 absorption in a native PSII, extending to low energy and underlying the CP47
chlorophyll trap absorption.
Cathodoluminescence imaging reveals that the bright green emission from the zero-dimensional perovskite Cs4PbBr6 is due to nanoscale CsPbBr3 impurities.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.