The current energy crisis is a worldwide problem and the search for clean and economic energy production is a global challenge. In this context, the exploitation and utilization of solar energy is becoming more and more popular. Photosynthesis in nature sets an outstanding example to harvest, transfer and store solar energy [
1]. In most of the photosynthetic organisms such as purple photosynthetic bacteria, the rigid protein scaffolds serve as key elements to bind pigments and control their excitation energy transfer. Sequential energy transfer is especially intriguing in this field to make full use of full-band solar energy. To mimic natural photosynthesis [
2], a variety of artificial light harvesting systems with two-step sequential energy transfer have been reported recently [
3,
4]. To realize such a process in artificial systems, donor/acceptor (D/A) chromophores are usually incorporated into useful scaffolds, such as nanoparticles, macrocycles, DNA and proteins. However, the overall energy transfer efficiency (
Φoverall) of the most successful artificial LHSs is lower than 70%; a value much lower than that of purple photosynthetic bacteria (almost 100%). It is possibly ascribed to the disordered D/A organization in these scaffold-supported artificial systems.