Excitons are considered as the basic concept used by describing the spectral properties of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes and excitation dynamics in photosynthetic light-harvesting antenna and reaction centers. Following the recently obtained structures of a variety of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes from plants and bacteria our interest in understanding the relation between structure, function and spectroscopy has strongly increased. These data demonstrate a short interpigment distance (of the order of 1 nm or even smaller) and/or a highly symmetric (ring-like) arrangement of pigment molecules in peripheral light-harvesting complexes of photosynthetic bacteria. Books which were devoted to the exciton problem so far mainly considered the spectral properties of molecular crystals. However, the small size of these pigment aggregates in the pigment-protein complexes as well as the role of the protein, which is responsible for the structural arrangement of the complex, clearly will have a dramatic influence on the pigment spectra and exciton dynamics. All these aspects of the problem are considered in this book. Exciton theory is mainly considered for small molecular aggregates (dimers, ring-like structures etc.). Together with the theoretical description of the classical conceptual approach, which mainly deals with polarization properties of the absorption and fluorescence spectra, the nonlinear femtosecond spectroscopy which is widely used for investigations now is also discussed. A large part of the book demonstrates the excitonic effects in a multitude of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes and how we can understand these properties on the basis of the exciton concept.
The exciton concept; the excitonally coupled dimer; spectral shapes; homogenous and inhomogenous broadening; excitons in molecular crystals and aggregates; excitonic interactions in photosynthetic systems; spectroscopic evidence; nonlinear spectroscopy of excitons - how to decide between "weak" and "strong" coupling?; exciton dynamics - introductory theory; migration of localized excitations; Forster excitation energy transfer; exciton transfer dynamics in photosynthetic systems experimental; nonlinear annihilation of excitons - theory; nonlinear annihilation of excitons - experimental; coherence in femtosecond spectroscopy of dimers; coherence in femtosecond spectroscopy of pigment protein complexes; concluding remarks and remaining problems.
"? this is a unique book ? The price is quite reasonable, and the book should not only be on the shelves of institutional libraries, but also in many private libraries and offices, where it will serve as a standard reference work for many years to come." Photosynthesis Research, 2000
Egbert Boeker, Rienk van Grondelle, Egbert (Free University of Amsterdam) Boeker, Rienk (Free University of Amsterdam) van Grondelle, Rienk Van Grondelle, Boeker
Egbert Boeker, Rienk van Grondelle, Netherlands) Boeker, Egbert (Free University of Amsterdam / Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands) van Grondelle, Rienk (Free University of Amsterdam / Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam