Authors
Ann Magnuson, Magnus Anderlund, Olof Johansson, Peter Lindblad, Reiner Lomoth, Tomas Polivka, Sascha Ott, Karin Stensjö, Stenbjörn Styring, Villy Sundström, Leif Hammarström
Publication date
2009/12/21
Source
Accounts of chemical research
Volume
42
Issue
12
Pages
1899-1909
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Description
Photosynthesis is performed by a multitude of organisms, but in nearly all cases, it is variations on a common theme: absorption of light followed by energy transfer to a reaction center where charge separation takes place. This initial form of chemical energy is stabilized by the biosynthesis of carbohydrates. To produce these energy-rich products, a substrate is needed that feeds in reductive equivalents. When photosynthetic microorganisms learned to use water as a substrate some 2 billion years ago, a fundamental barrier against unlimited use of solar energy was overcome.
The possibility of solar energy use has inspired researchers to construct artificial photosynthetic systems that show analogy to parts of the intricate molecular machinery of photosynthesis. Recent years have seen a reorientation of efforts toward creating integrated light-to-fuel systems that can use solar energy for direct synthesis of energy-rich …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Magnuson, M Anderlund, O Johansson, P Lindblad… - Accounts of chemical research, 2009