posted on 2015-11-11, 00:00authored byRoel Tempelaar, Alexei Halpin, Philip
J. M. Johnson, Jianxin Cai, R. Scott Murphy, Jasper Knoester, R. J. Dwayne Miller, Thomas L. C. Jansen
Quantum
coherence is proclaimed to promote efficient energy collection
by light-harvesting complexes and prototype organic photovoltaics.
However, supporting spectroscopic studies are hindered by the problem
of distinguishing between the excited state and ground state origin
of coherent spectral transients. Coherence amplitude maps, which systematically
represent quantum beats observable in two-dimensional (2D) spectroscopy,
are currently the prevalent tool for making this distinction. In this
article, we present coherence amplitude maps of a molecular dimer,
which have become significantly distorted as a result of the finite
laser bandwidth used to record the 2D spectra. We argue that under
standard spectroscopic conditions similar distortions are to be expected
for compounds absorbing over a spectral range similar to, or exceeding,
that of the dimer. These include virtually all photovoltaic polymers
and certain photosynthetic complexes. With the distortion of coherence
amplitude maps, alternative ways to identify quantum coherence are
called for. Here, we use numerical simulations that reproduce the
essential photophysics of the dimer to unambiguously determine the
excited state origin of prominent quantum beats observed in the 2D
spectral measurements. This approach is proposed as a dependable method
for coherence identification.