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Latest News

Quantum mechanics helps with photosynthesis

Clean Technology Solutions, CRC, e-conversion, Research, Chemistry | 04.02.2025

Why do plants transport energy so efficiently and quickly?

First author Erika Keil and Prof. Jürgen Hauer in the lab. Image: Andreas Heddergott / TUM
Examination of a sample with plant chlorophyll obtained from frozen spinach. Image: Andreas Heddergott / TUM

Photosynthesis - mainly carried out by plants - is based on a remarkably efficient energy conversion process. To generate chemical energy, sunlight must first be captured and transported further. This happens practically loss-free and extremely quickly. A new study by the Chair of Dynamic Spectroscopy at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) shows that quantum mechanical effects play a key role in this process. A team led by Erika Keil and Prof. Jürgen Hauer discovered this through measurements and simulations.

The efficient conversion of solar energy into storable forms of chemical energy is the dream of many engineers. Nature found a perfect solution to this problem billions of years ago. The new study shows that quantum mechanics is not just for physicists but also plays a key role in biology.

Photosynthetic organisms such as green plants use quantum mechanical processes to harness the energy of the sun, as Prof. Jürgen Hauer explains: “When light is absorbed in a leaf, for example, the electronic excitation energy is distributed over several states of each excited chlorophyll molecule; this is called a superposition of excited states. It is the first stage of an almost loss-free energy transfer within and between the molecules and makes the efficient onward transport of solar energy possible. Quantum mechanics is therefore central to understanding the first steps of energy transfer and charge separation.”

This process, which cannot be understood satisfactorily by classical physics alone, occurs constantly in green plants and other photosynthetic organisms, such as photosynthetic bacteria. However, the exact mechanisms have still not been fully elucidated. Hauer and first author Erika Keil see their study as an important new basis in the effort to clarify how chlorophyll, the pigment in leaf green, works. Applying these findings in the design of artificial photosynthesis units could help to utilize solar energy with unprecedented efficiency for electricity generation or photochemistry.

For the study, the researchers examined two specific sections of the spectrum in which chlorophyll absorbs light: the low-energy Q region (yellow to red spectral range) and the high-energy B region (blue to green). The Q region consists of two different electronic states that are quantum mechanically coupled. This coupling leads to loss-free energy transport in the molecule. The system then relaxes through “cooling”, i.e. by releasing energy in the form of heat. The study shows that quantum mechanical effects can have a decisive influence on biologically relevant processes.

 

Publications

Erika Keil, Ajeet Kumar, Lena Bäuml, Sebastian Reiter, Erling Thyrhaug, Simone Moser, Christopher D. P. Duffy, Regina de Vivie-Riedle and Jürgen Hauer: “Reassessing the role and lifetime of Qx in the energy transfer dynamics of chlorophyll a” published in: Chemical Science 27.11.2024, http://doi.org/10.1039/D4SC06441K

 

Further information and links

  • TUM School of Natural Sciences
  • Department of Chemistry
  • Cluster of Excellence e-conversion

 

Technical University of Munich

Corporate Communications Center

  • Ulrich Meyer
  • presse@tum.de
  • Teamwebsite

 

Contacts to this article:

Prof. Dr. Jürgen Hauer
Technical University of Munich
TUM School of Natural Sciences
Associate Professor for Dynamic Spectroscopy
Phone +49 89 289 13420
juergen.hauer@tum.de
http://www.ch.nat.tum.de/dynspec/startseite/
 

Original article: http://www.tum.de/en/news-and-events/all-news/press-releases/details/quantum-mechanics-helps-with-photosynthesis 
 


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