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Rensselaer Scientists Unlock Some Key Secrets of Photosynthesis
Research on the Water Oxidation Reaction in
Plants and Bacteria Helps Solve an Important Piece of the Solar
Energy Conversion Puzzle; Represents a Major Step Toward a New
Generation of Photovoltaics
New research led by chemists in the Baruch ’60 Center for
Biochemical Solar Energy Research at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute is seeking to detail the individual steps of highly
efficient reactions that convert sunlight into chemical energy
within plants and bacteria.
In a paper published in the recent edition
[DOI:10.1039/C2EE21210B] of the Royal Society of Chemistry
journal, Energy & Environmental Science, the
scientists — led by K. V. Lakshmi, Rensselaer assistant
professor of chemistry and chemical biology and scientific lead
at the Baruch ’60 Center — have provided important information
on a specific portion of the photosynthetic process called
photosystem II. It has been a major challenge to directly
observe the individual steps of the solar water-splitting
reaction that takes place in photosystem II, Lakshmi said. This
finding provides new foundational research into how plants
efficiently convert energy from the sun and could help inform
the development of a new, highly robust, and more efficient
generation of solar-energy technologies.
Lakshmi was joined in the research by Rensselaer students
Sergey Milikisyants, Ruchira Chatterjee, and Christopher
Coates, as well as Faisal H.M. Koua and Professor Jian-Ren Shen
of Okayama University in Japan. The research is funded by the
Office of Basic Energy Sciences, U.S. Department of Energy.
“The photosynthetic system of plants is nature’s most
elaborate nanoscale biological machine,” said Lakshmi. “It
converts light energy at unrivaled efficiency of more than 95
percent compared to 10 to 15 percent in the current man-made
solar technologies. In order to capture that efficiency in
solar energy technology, we must first tackle the basic science
of photosynthesis by understanding the chemistry behind its
ultra-efficient energy conversion process in nature.”
The new research focuses on the first of two photochemical
reactions that plants use to convert solar energy into chemical
energy that takes place within photosystem II. Specifically,
the researchers studied the binding and activation of the
substrate water molecules in the catalytic site of photosystem
II. Photosystem II is a protein complex in plants and
cyanobacteria that uses photons of light to split water
molecules. This is known as the solar oxidation of water. The
protons and electrons resulting from this split are then used
by the plant to fuel the remaining systems in the
photosynthetic process that transforms light into chemical
energy.
“Photosystem II is the engine of life,” Lakshmi said. “It
performs one of the most energetically demanding reactions
known to mankind, splitting water, with remarkable ease and
efficiency.”
One of the difficulties in studying photosystem II is that
conventional methods have not yet been able to deeply probe the
photosystem II complex, according to Lakshmi, and the mechanism
of the photochemical reactions must be fully understood before
bio-inspired technologies that mimic the natural processes of
photosynthesis can effectively be developed.
In the new research, the scientists investigated the
catalytic site of photosystem II, referred to as the
oxygen-evolving complex. This is part of the system that breaks
down the water. It does so in five distinct stages. Only the
first two of these stages have been investigated in any detail,
according to Lakshmi, because the remaining stages are
relatively unstable and quickly change.
To understand the more unstable stages of the process,
scientists need advanced scientific tools that can probe these
complex systems at the atomic level. For this research, Lakshmi
and her colleagues trapped three different species of
photosystem II in one of the more unstable stages of the
process – the third stage in the oxygen-evolving complex called
photochemical S2 intermediate — by using
low-temperature illumination of photosystem II. They then
analyzed the system using an advanced spectroscopic technique
called two-dimensional hyperfine sub-level correlation
spectroscopy.
The tool detects the weak magnetic interactions in the
catalytic site to uncover the structure and activation of the
substrate water molecules in the S2 intermediate of
photosystem II. The technology, found in few labs in the world,
according to Lakshmi, identified four important groups of
hydrogen atoms arising from substrate water molecules within
the oxygen-evolving complex. This is a significant step in
determining the fate of the water molecules in the solar water
oxidation reaction that occurs within photosystem II, Lakshmi
said.
“Water is a very stable molecule and it takes four photons
of light to split water,” she said. “This is a challenge for
chemists and physicists around the world as the four-photon
reaction has very stringent requirements.”
The article published in the Royal Society of Chemistry
journal Energy & Environmental Science can be found at:
http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2012/ee/c2ee21210b
The Baruch ’60 Center for Biochemical Solar Energy
Research is an integrated research and education
program at Rensselaer that was inaugurated in October 2008
under the auspices of President Shirley Ann Jackson and Thomas
R. Baruch ’60, a member of the Rensselaer Board of Trustees. Researchers at the
center are working to develop the next generation of solar
technology by studying one of the most powerful
energy-converting machines in world — plants. Researchers use
sophisticated new technologies and techniques that are being
developed at the Baruch ’60 Center to understand the
energy-converting power of plants and develop new technologies
that mimic this extremely efficient natural system.
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Published
July 2,
2012 |
Contact: Mary L. Martialay
Phone: (518) 276-2146
E-mail: martim12@rpi.edu |
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