Medical and Hospital News  
SOLAR DAILY
Photosynthesis or photovoltaics: Weighing the impact

Photosynthesis or photovoltaics? Which is more efficient at harvesting the sun's energy, plants or solar cells? This salient question and an answer are the subject of an article published in the May issue of the journal Science. Credit: Bob Blankenship
by Staff Writers
Tucson AZ (SPX) May 16, 2011
Which is more efficient at harvesting the sun's energy, plants or solar cells? This salient question and an answer are the subject of an article published in the May issue of the journal Science.

Although both photosynthesis and photovoltaics harvest energy from the sun, they operate in distinctly different ways producing different fuels. It is not a simple task to find common ground between the two in order to compare energy conversion efficiency.

"In order to make meaningful comparisons between photosynthesis (which provides stored chemical potential) and photovoltaic technology (which provides instantaneous electrical power), we considered photovoltaic driven water electrolysis to yield hydrogen using existing technology as an example of artificial photosynthesis," explained co-author Thomas Moore, director of the Center for Bioenergy and Photosynthesis at Arizona State University.

"The hydrogen produced by the artificial system is thermodynamically equivalent to the sugar produced by photosynthesis. The take-home from this point is that the artificial system out performs the natural one, but on the basis of potential for efficient solar energy conversion as measured by the land area required for a given energy output, both technological and biological processes could in principle offer similar outcomes."

Photovoltaic technology uses fundamental principles combined with advances in materials to achieve record efficiencies of solar-to-electrical power conversion and thereby hydrogen production from water electrolysis.

The cost to the biosphere of "our cut" of NPP is driving several Earth systems irreversibly across boundaries that were established over geological time scales, says Moore. Earth systems affected include the nitrogen cycle, carbon cycle, fresh water, land use, and an increase in the rate of biodiversity loss.

In other words, photosynthetic energy flow is currently booked (almost certainly overbooked) for biosphere services including food and limited bioenergy production for human use. As a consequence, there are no reserves of photosynthetic capacity to provide increasing amounts of biofuel for growing our GDP and food for the ever-increasing human population. Indeed, when such demands are made, the capacity comes at the further peril of biosphere services.

"Fortunately, the efficiency of photosynthetic NPP could be dramatically improved to meet human needs - the 133 terawatts increased to about 150 terawatts with minimum additional impact on Earth systems," explains Moore excitedly.

"I'm thinking about selected photosynthetic systems in which rational design, based on the principles demonstrated in artificial systems, could be used to optimize solar-to-biofuel conversion efficiencies to meet particular needs."

"Such photosynthetic systems would be 'living' in that they would retain key features of living cells including self-assembly, repair, replication and the use of Earth-abundant materials - features that I think are essential to scale and match sustainable energy production to local needs but that remain elusive to non-living, human engineered constructs," concludes Moore.

Lead author on the paper is Robert E. Blankenship, Washington University, St. Louis. Additional authors include David M. Tiede, Argonne National Laboratory; James Barber, Imperial College London; Gary W. Brudvig, Yale; Graham Fleming and Anastasios Melis, University of California, Berkeley; Maria Ghirardi and Arthur J. Nozik, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Colordao; M.R. Gunner, City College of New York; Wolfgang Junge, University of Osnabruck; David M. Kramer, Michigan State University; Christopher C. Moser, University of Pennsylvania; Daniel G. Nocera, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Donald R. Ort, University of Illinois; William W. Parson; University of Washington; Roger C. Prince, ExxonMobil; and Richard T. Sayre, Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, St. Louis.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Arizona State University
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


SOLAR DAILY
In Less than 100 Days Discount Barry Trashes Reputation and Commercial Law
Gerroa, Australia (SPX) May 16, 2011
The NSW Premier has decided that commercial contracts in NSW are not worth the paper they are written on and has moved to retrospectively legislate to change existing Solar/Wind gross feed in tariffs. Slashing the rate by one third at the stroke of pen and foreshadowing special legislation to bar Solar Energy and Wind Energy power system owners from suing the NSW government. The move break ... read more







SOLAR DAILY
Japan SOS mayor vows to save town near nuclear plant

More than 40 injured in China bank blast

Japan to help TEPCO pay nuclear victims

Japan decides on TEPCO compensation scheme: media

SOLAR DAILY
Europe's first EGNOS airport to guide down giant Beluga aircraft

'Green' GPS saves fuel, energy

Apple update fixes iPhone tracking "bugs"

Russia, Sweden to boost space cooperation

SOLAR DAILY
Indian brides told to put down their mobile phones

Super-healing researcher follows intuition

No nuts for 'Nutcracker Man'

Why the eye is better than a camera at capturing contrast and faint detail simultaneously

SOLAR DAILY
New study gives hope for dwindling S.Asia vultures

Study shows evolutionary adaptations can be reversed, but rarely

Growing on Fool's Gold

Variety is the spice of life for animal movement

SOLAR DAILY
African ministers hail HIV therapy progress

Early drug therapy curbs HIV transmission: study

Drugs study hailed as watershed in AIDS saga

Vanderbilt biologists discover a new class of insect repellent

SOLAR DAILY
US lawmakers fear impact of China crackdown

Where is Ai Weiwei?

Europeans 'condescending' in human rights issues: China

Ai Weiwei supporters rally at new shows in London

SOLAR DAILY
Cargo ship, China crew rescued from pirates

Pirates seize Chinese-crewed cargo ship: Xinhua

Tension escalates as navies, pirates take off gloves

Firms plan private war against pirates

SOLAR DAILY
Japan core machinery orders up 2.9% in March

Japan consumer confidence dives at record pace

China pared US debt holding in March for 5th month

Hong Kong land auction sees top-end prices


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement