At high levels of optical illumination, multichromophore arrays can exhibit
a novel form of resonance energy transfer involving the coupling of two do
nors and one acceptor chromophore. This three-centre energy pooling is the
subject of an investigation into its dependence on the mutual positions and
orientations of the participating chromophores. Employing results obtained
through quantum electrodynamical calculation, comparisons are made between
pairwise resonance energy transfer and the novel three-body analogue, with
counterparts to the conventional orientation factor identified. The interp
lay of such factors is analysed in the context of molecular architectures b
ased on linear configurations. The relative dominance of cooperative and ac
cretive mechanisms for energy pooling is addressed and the relative alignme
nts and magnitudes of the donor and acceptor transition moments and polaris
abilities are shown to have a profound effect on achievable pooling efficie
ncy.