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Dive into the research topics where Valentyn I. Prokhorenko is active.

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Featured researches published by Valentyn I. Prokhorenko.


Science | 2006

Coherent Control of Retinal Isomerization in Bacteriorhodopsin

Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; Andrea M. Nagy; Stephen A. Waschuk; Leonid S. Brown; Robert R. Birge; R. J. Dwayne Miller

Optical control of the primary step of photoisomerization of the retinal molecule in bacteriorhodopsin from the all-trans to the 13-cis state was demonstrated under weak field conditions (where only 1 of 300 retinal molecules absorbs a photon during the excitation cycle) that are relevant to understanding biological processes. By modulating the phases and amplitudes of the spectral components in the photoexcitation pulse, we showed that the absolute quantity of 13-cis retinal formed upon excitation can be enhanced or suppressed by ±20% of the yield observed using a short transform-limited pulse having the same actinic energy. The shaped pulses were shown to be phase-sensitive at intensities too low to access different higher electronic states, and so these pulses apparently steer the isomerization through constructive and destructive interference effects, a mechanism supported by observed signatures of vibrational coherence. These results show that the wave properties of matter can be observed and even manipulated in a system as large and complex as a protein.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Coherent control of the population transfer in complex solvated molecules at weak excitation. An experimental study

Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; Andrea M. Nagy; R. J. Dwayne Miller

We performed a series of successful experiments for the optimization of the population transfer from the ground to the first excited state in a complex solvated molecule (rhodamine 101 in methanol) using shaped excitation pulses at very low intensities (1 absorbed photon per 100-500 molecules per pulse). We found that the population transfer can be controlled and significantly enhanced by applying excitation laser pulses with crafted pulse shapes. The optimal shape was found in feedback-controlled experiments using a genetic search algorithm. The temporal profile of the optimal excitation pulse corresponds to a comb of subpulses regularly spaced by approximately 150 fs, whereas its spectrum consists of a series of well-resolved peaks spaced apart by approximately 6.5 nm corresponding to a frequency of 220 cm(-1). This frequency matches very well with the frequency modulation of the population kinetics (period of approximately 150 fs), observed by excitation with a short (approximately 20 fs) transform-limited laser pulse directly after excitation. In addition, an antioptimization experiment was performed under the same conditions. The difference in the population of the excited state for the optimal and antioptimal pulses reaches approximately 30% even at very weak excitation. The results of optimization are reproducible and have clear physical meaning.


Optics Express | 2009

Coherently-controlled two-dimensional photon echo electronic spectroscopy

Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; Alexei Halpin; R J. Miller

Optical two-dimensional photon-echo spectroscopy is realized with shaped excitation pulses, allowing coherent control of twodimensional spectra. This development enables probing of state-selective quantum decoherence and phase/time sensitive couplings between states. The coherently-controlled two-dimensional photon-echo spectrometer with two pulse shapers is based on a passively stabilized four-beam interferometer with diffractive optic, and allows heterodyne detection of signals with a long-term phase stability of approximately Lambda/100. The two-dimensional spectra of Rhodamine 101 in a methanol solution, measured with unshaped and shaped pulses, exhibit significant differences. We observe in particular, the appearance of fine structure in the spectra obtained using shaped excitation pulses.


Nature Chemistry | 2015

Local vibrational coherences drive the primary photochemistry of vision

Philip J. M. Johnson; Alexei Halpin; Takefumi Morizumi; Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; Oliver P. Ernst; R. J. Dwayne Miller

The role of vibrational coherence-concerted vibrational motion on the excited-state potential energy surface-in the isomerization of retinal in the protein rhodopsin remains elusive, despite considerable experimental and theoretical efforts. We revisited this problem with resonant ultrafast heterodyne-detected transient-grating spectroscopy. The enhanced sensitivity that this technique provides allows us to probe directly the primary photochemical reaction of vision with sufficient temporal and spectral resolution to resolve all the relevant nuclear dynamics of the retinal chromophore during isomerization. We observed coherent photoproduct formation on a sub-50 fs timescale, and recovered a host of vibrational modes of the retinal chromophore that modulate the transient-grating signal during the isomerization reaction. Through Fourier filtering and subsequent time-domain analysis of the transient vibrational dynamics, the excited-state nuclear motions that drive the isomerization reaction were identified, and comprise stretching, torsional and out-of-plane wagging motions about the local C11=C12 isomerization coordinate.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Coherent control of the isomerization of retinal in bacteriorhodopsin in the high intensity regime

Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; Alexei Halpin; Philip J. M. Johnson; R. J. Dwayne Miller; Leonid S. Brown

Coherent control protocols provide a direct experimental determination of the relative importance of quantum interference or phase relationships of coupled states along a selected pathway. These effects are most readily observed in the high intensity regime where the field amplitude is sufficient to overcome decoherence effects. The coherent response of retinal photoisomerization in bacteriorhodopsin to the phase of the photoexcitation pulses was examined at fluences of 10(15) - 2.5 × 10(16) photons per square centimeter, comparable to or higher than the saturation excitation level of the S(0) - S(1) retinal electronic transition. At moderate excitation levels of ∼6 × 10(15) photons/cm(2) (<100 GW/cm(2)), chirping the excitation pulses increases the all-trans to 13-cis isomerization yield by up to 16% relative to transform limited pulses. The reported results extend previous weak-field studies [Prokhorenko et al., Science 313, 1257 (2006)] and further illustrate that quantum coherence effects persist along the reaction coordinate in strong fields even for systems as complex as biological molecules. However, for higher excitation levels of ∼200 GW/cm(2), there is a dramatic change in photophysics that leads to multiphoton generated photoproducts unrelated to the target isomerization reaction channel and drastically changes the observed isomerization kinetics that appears, in particular, as a red shift of the transient spectra. These results explain the apparent contradictions of the work by Florean et al. [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 106, 10896 (2009)] in the high intensity regime. We are able to show that the difference in observations and interpretation is due to artifacts associated with additional multiphoton-induced photoproducts. At the proper monitoring wavelengths, coherent control in the high intensity regime is clearly observable. The present work highlights the importance of conducting coherent control experiments in the low intensity regime to access information on quantum interference effects along specific reaction coordinates.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Nature does not rely on long-lived electronic quantum coherence for photosynthetic energy transfer

Hong-Guang Duan; Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; Richard J. Cogdell; Khuram U. Ashraf; Amy L. Stevens; Michael Thorwart; R. J. Dwayne Miller

Significance We have revisited the 2D spectroscopy of the excitation energy transfer in the Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) protein. Based on 2D spectroscopic signatures, the energy transfer dynamics in the FMO protein has been argued to be supported by long-lived electronic quantum coherence on timescales up to 1.5 ps. In contrast, our analysis, based on experimental data and confirmed by theoretical calculations, shows that the electronic decoherence occurs within 60 fs, in agreement with typical dephasing times in systems under these conditions. Given the relatively well-defined structure of the FMO protein, and comparative couplings between chlorophylls to other photosynthetic systems, the observed extremely fast decoherence should be viewed as general, bringing to question any significant quantum coherent transport contributions to photosynthesis. During the first steps of photosynthesis, the energy of impinging solar photons is transformed into electronic excitation energy of the light-harvesting biomolecular complexes. The subsequent energy transfer to the reaction center is commonly rationalized in terms of excitons moving on a grid of biomolecular chromophores on typical timescales <100 fs. Today’s understanding of the energy transfer includes the fact that the excitons are delocalized over a few neighboring sites, but the role of quantum coherence is considered as irrelevant for the transfer dynamics because it typically decays within a few tens of femtoseconds. This orthodox picture of incoherent energy transfer between clusters of a few pigments sharing delocalized excitons has been challenged by ultrafast optical spectroscopy experiments with the Fenna–Matthews–Olson protein, in which interference oscillatory signals up to 1.5 ps were reported and interpreted as direct evidence of exceptionally long-lived electronic quantum coherence. Here, we show that the optical 2D photon echo spectra of this complex at ambient temperature in aqueous solution do not provide evidence of any long-lived electronic quantum coherence, but confirm the orthodox view of rapidly decaying electronic quantum coherence on a timescale of 60 fs. Our results can be considered as generic and give no hint that electronic quantum coherence plays any biofunctional role in real photoactive biomolecular complexes. Because in this structurally well-defined protein the distances between bacteriochlorophylls are comparable to those of other light-harvesting complexes, we anticipate that this finding is general and directly applies to even larger photoactive biomolecular complexes.


Optics Express | 2009

Stable UV to IR supercontinuum generation in calcium fluoride with conserved circular polarization states

Philip J. M. Johnson; Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; R. J. Dwayne Miller

The supercontinuum generated with a linearly polarized near-IR (775 nm) pump in rotated calcium fluoride is shown to have intrinsic intensity and polarization modulations. To mask the rotation of the crystal plate, we circularly polarize the pump and find greatly improved output parameters for the generated white light: intensity fluctuations of 0.5% limited only by pump laser stability, and a circular polarization state-matching that of the pump-over the entire visible spectrum. This polarization conservation allows the return of the supercontinuum to a linear polarization state or to a pair of linearly polarized beams with correlated intensity fluctuations. We were also able to extend the supercontinuum source deep into the ultraviolet with a frequency doubled (387 nm) pump, to serve as an new source to probe the region where most molecular photochemistry occurs.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Two-Dimensional Electronic Spectroscopy of Light-Harvesting Complex II at Ambient Temperature: A Joint Experimental and Theoretical Study

Hong-Guang Duan; Amy L. Stevens; Peter Nalbach; Michael Thorwart; Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; R. J. Dwayne Miller

We have performed broad-band two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectroscopy of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) at ambient temperature. We found that electronic dephasing occurs within ∼60 fs and inhomogeneous broadening is approximately 120 cm(-1). A three-dimensional global fit analysis allows us to identify several time scales in the dynamics of the 2D spectra ranging from 100 fs to ∼10 ps and to uncover the energy-transfer pathways in LHCII. In particular, the energy transfer between the chlorophyll b and chlorophyll a pools occurs within ∼1.1 ps. Retrieved 2D decay-associated spectra also uncover the spectral positions of corresponding diagonal peaks in the 2D spectra. Residuals in the decay traces exhibit periodic modulations with different oscillation periods. However, only one of them can be associated with the excitonic cross-peaks in the 2D spectrum, while the remaining ones are presumably of vibrational origin. For the interpretation of the spectroscopic data, we have applied a refined exciton model for LHCII. It reproduces the linear absorption, circular dichroism, and 2D spectra at different waiting times. Several components of the energy transport are revealed from theoretical simulations that agree well with the experimental observations.


Optics Letters | 2011

Enhanced bandwidth noncollinear optical parametric amplification with a narrowband anamorphic pump.

Philip J. M. Johnson; Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; R. J. Dwayne Miller

Through the use of anamorphic focusing, we present a method for generating broadband noncollinear optical parametric amplification in signal regions lacking a broadband phase-matching condition that is ideally suited for narrowband pump sources, herein based on an erbium-doped fiber oscillator. With a short focal length cylindrical lens to enhance the phase-matching condition and a long focal length cylindrical lens in the orthogonal plane to limit the pump power in the amplifying beta barium borate crystal, we amplify pulses in the blue-green spectral region with over 100 THz (∼3500 cm(-1)) bandwidth. The amplified signal is subsequently compressed to 9.5 fs, near the transform limit.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

On the origin of oscillations in two-dimensional spectra of excitonically-coupled molecular systems

Hong-Guang Duan; Peter Nalbach; Valentyn I. Prokhorenko; Shaul Mukamel; Michael Thorwart

We investigate an artificial molecular dimer made of two dipole coupled cyanine dye monomers in which a strong coherent coupling between electronic and vibrational degrees of freedom arises. Clear signatures of this coupling are reflected in an oscillatory time evolution of the off-diagonal vibronic cross peaks in the two-dimensional optical photon echo spectrum. We find a strong coherence component damped by fast electronic dephasing ( fs) accompanied by a much weaker component which decays on the longer time scales (ps) associated to vibrational dephasing. We find that vibronic coupling does not cause longer dephasing times of the dominant photo echo component but additional weak but long-lived components emerge.

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