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OKIsItJustMe

(19,938 posts)
Fri Mar 29, 2013, 06:04 PM Mar 2013

Picking Apart Photosynthesis—New insights…could lead to better catalysts for water splitting

http://www.caltech.edu/content/picking-apart-photosynthesis
[font face=Serif]03/28/2013

[font size=5]Picking Apart Photosynthesis[/font]
New insights from Caltech chemists could lead to better catalysts for water splitting

[font size=4]PASADENA, Calif.—Chemists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory believe they can now explain one of the remaining mysteries of photosynthesis, the chemical process by which plants convert sunlight into usable energy and generate the oxygen that we breathe. The finding suggests a new way of approaching the design of catalysts that drive the water-splitting reactions of artificial photosynthesis.[/font]

[font size=3]"If we want to make systems that can do artificial photosynthesis, it's important that we understand how the system found in nature functions," says Theodor Agapie, an assistant professor of chemistry at Caltech and principal investigator on a paper in the journal Nature Chemistry that describes the new results.

One of the key pieces of biological machinery that enables photosynthesis is a conglomeration of proteins and pigments known as photosystem II. Within that system lies a small cluster of atoms, called the oxygen-evolving complex, where water molecules are split and molecular oxygen is made. Although this oxygen-producing process has been studied extensively, the role that various parts of the cluster play has remained unclear.



A number of the catalysts that are currently being developed to drive artificial photosynthesis are mixed-metal oxide catalysts. It has again been unclear what role the redox-inactive metals in these mixed catalysts play. The new findings suggest that the redox-inactive metals affect the way the electrons are transferred. "If you pick the right redox-inactive metal, you can tune the reduction potential to bring the reaction to the range where it is favorable," Agapie says. "That means we now have a more rational way of thinking about how to design these sorts of catalysts because we know how much the redox-inactive metal affects the redox chemistry."

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nchem.1578
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Picking Apart Photosynthesis—New insights…could lead to better catalysts for water splitting (Original Post) OKIsItJustMe Mar 2013 OP
Great headline pscot Mar 2013 #1
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