The institute
FEMTO's news

You are here

Understanding energy transfers during photosynthesis

Using three pigments manipulated by scanning tunneling microscopy, researchers from IPCMS and FEMTO-ST are studying energy transfers between molecules to gain a finer understanding of the photosynthesis mechanism in plants. This work is published in Nature Chemistry.

Photosynthesis allows plants to transform solar energy into chemical energy necessary for their growth. This mechanism is carried out by a complex assembly of organic molecules, the pigments, whose purpose is to collect, transport and transform solar energy. The successive energy transfers are made by jumps between neighboring molecules, but also via collective phenomena, potentially coherent, involving simultaneously a larger number of pigments. To better understand these effects, it is necessary to unravel these pigment assemblies in order to study separately the role of each active unit in photosynthesis. In this study, using a "bottom-up" approach, the researchers use model pigments isolated from each other, which they then reassemble to form the first functional bases capable of reproducing the energy transfer mechanisms involved in photosynthesis.

Three different pigments are thus deposited by evaporation on a surface in very small quantities, in order to have molecules that are far from each other. A scanning tunneling microscope is used to visualize each of the pigments, and then to manipulate them one by one, in order to form structures close to the elementary bricks observed in natural photosynthetic systems. A first pigment, called donor, absorbs an excitation. A second pigment acts as an intermediary which, depending on its nature, increases or reduces the efficiency of the energy transfer. A third pigment, acceptor, transforms this energy into photon. In the experiment, the scanning tunneling microscope is used to emit an electron to generate a local excitation of one of the pigments, which allows to reproduce the mechanism of absorption of a photon by a pigment of the plant. The energy received by the acceptor is converted into photons rather than chemical energy. The reaction is thus a reverse photosynthesis, with the capture of an electron leading to the release of a photon, but the energy transfers take place in the same way.

This approach allows to control the distance and orientation between the pigments with a precision close to the distance between two atoms and the researchers were able to highlight the role played by interactions in the energy transfer mechanism. These interactions are either long range, such as dipole-dipole, or short range, the latter depending on a mechanism, called exchange, specific to quantum physics. This study also shows that, depending on its chemical nature, the intermediate pigment can play a role of active relay of the excitation, amplify the energy transfer between two molecules without directly intervening in the process, or partially block it.

Thus, by using elementary bricks similar to those used by the plant to transport and convert solar energy, the researchers have developed a platform to reproduce the fine mechanisms of photosynthesis and, in the near future, elucidate them.

Schematic of the experiment where the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope (in gray) is used to excite an assembly of three pigments close to those involved in plant photosynthesis. The excitation generated in the blue pigment is transferred, sequentially, to the red pigment where the energy is transformed into photon (top). Hyper-resolved fluorescence image of the three pigments (bottom).    (Credit: Guillaume Schull, IPCMS)

 

DOI : 10.1038/s41557-021-00697-z.

Contact at FEMTO-ST : Frédéric Cherioux, CNRS Senior researcher

See the article published on the INP CNRS website

  • The Nanosciences group selected by Omicron for their Result of the Month

    Omicron, a private company that manufactures surface tunneling microscopes (STM), has selected a paper of the Nanosciences group that recently appeared in Physical Review Letters as its Result of the Month for October 2008.

    Read more
  • Clinical Proteomics in Oncology

    The French Institute of Cancer (Canceropole Grand-Est) and the CLIPP Proteomic Platform (Dijon, Besançon) organize the 2nd international conference entitled "Clinical Proteomics in Oncology" in Dijon (France) on July 3rd and 4th , 2008.

    Read more
  • Room temperature stable molecules adsorbed on semi-conductors

    The « nanosciences » group has demonstrated for the first time that conjugated organic molecules can be observed on semi-conducting substrates at room temperature, whether they are isolated or self-organized.

    Read more
  • Best poster award for work on nanoparticle synthesis using microreactor at Indian Conference

    The poster entitled “Gold nanoparticle synthesis at room temperature using microreactor” won the first prize of best poster at the International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology which took place in Gurgaon, India from December 17th to 21st 2007.

    Read more
  • Fu-Li Hsiao receives a Best Student Paper Award at IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium 2007

    Fu-Li Hsiao, a PhD candidate shared with the National Central university of Taipei, Taiwan, has received one of the Best Student Paper Awards at IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium 2007, held in New York from October 17-31, 2007. The title of his contribution was "Experimental Study of Complete Band Gaps and Waveguiding inside Phononic Crystal Slabs".

    Read more
  • International Symposium on Flow Visualization and Image Processing

    The International Symposium on Flow Visualization and Image Processing is coming back to France! It will take place in Nice from 1st to 4th July, 2008.

    Read more
  • Oliver Wright speaking on "Tracking surface phonons on phononic crystals", September 13, 2007

    Tracking surface phonons on phononic crystals

    Read more
  • Abdelkrim Khelif is the recipient of a CNRS 2007 bronze medal

    Abdelkrim Khelif was awarded one of the 2007 bronze medals of the CNRS. According to the official wording, "The bronze medal acknowledges the first years of research of a talented young scientist. This award is an incentive from the CNRS to pursue well engaged and already productive researches."

    Read more
  • Best Poster Award at ElecMOl’06

    A joint report of collaborative work with researchers of the Laboratoire de Physique Moléculaire was awarded a Best Poster Award during the ElecMOl’06 meeting (December 2006, Minatec, Grenoble, FRANCE). The topic of the communication was about "self-assembly & supramolecular architecture".

    Read more

Pages