Pretty neat trick.. using quantum coherence to allow energy from captured
sunlight to get to the algae's photosynthesis reaction centers as fast as
possible.  

Quantum biology: Algae may prove to be key ingredient for organic solar
cells

http://www.techtimes.com/articles/8680/20140617/algae-may-prove-key-ingredie
nt-organic-solar-cells.htm


A research team led by Australian scientists says a strange quantum
phenomenon during photosynthesis that allows algae to survive in low lights
levels might lead to more efficient organic-based solar cells.

The exact function of the quantum effect known as coherence in algae is
unknown, they say, but likely is how they harvest energy from the sun at low
light levels.

"We studied tiny single-celled algae called cryptophytes that thrive in the
bottom of pools of water, or under thick ice, where very little light
reaches them," says senior study author Paul Curmi of the University of New
South Wales.

While the light-harvesting method of most such types of algae displays
quantum coherence, a genetic mutation altering a light-harvesting type of
protein in some algae causes it to be switched off, the researchers found.

The finding will allow the study of the role quantum coherence plays in
photosynthesis by comparing algae with and without those proteins, Curmi
said.

In the often baffling realm of quantum physics, systems deemed to be
coherent -- having all their quantum waves moving in step - can exist in
different states at the same time, an effect called superposition, the
researchers said.

"The assumption is that this could increase the efficiency of
photosynthesis, allowing the algae and bacteria to exist on almost no
light," Curmi said.

The assumption is that quantum coherence allows energy from captured
sunlight to get to the algae's photosynthesis reaction centers as fast as
possible, he said.

"It was assumed the energy gets to the reaction [center] in a random
fashion, like a drunk staggering home," Curmi said. "But quantum coherence
would allow the energy to test every possible pathway simultaneously before
travelling via the quickest route."

The researchers said they utilized X-ray crystallography in order to analyze
the structure of light-harvesting centers in three species of algae.

All showed the genetic mutation that changed proteins and affected
coherence, they said.

"This shows cryptophytes have evolved an elegant but powerful genetic switch
to control coherence and change the mechanisms used for light harvesting,"
Curmi said.

In addition to possible pointing the way to better and more efficient
organic solar cells, the finding could lead to a new class of quantum-based
electronic devices, the researchers said.

Their next step, the researchers said, would be to analyze and compare
different cryptophytes inhabiting different environmental niche to see if
the quantum coherence effect is a factor in their survival.

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