Photosynthesis:
Photosynthesis
is the process by which plants, some bacteria, and some protists use
the energy from sunlight to produce sugar, which cellular respiration
converts into ATP, the “fuel” used by all living things. The conversion
of unusable sunlight energy into usable chemical energy, is associated
with the actions of the green pigment chlorophyll.
They release molecular oxygen and remove CO2 (Carbon Dioxide) from the air.
ATP: Adenosine Tri-Phosphate (ATP) Here the energy is stored in living systems; it consists of a Nucleotide (with Ribose sugar) with Three Phosphate groups.
Why is photosynthesis important:
Nearly all living things depend on the energy
produced from photosynthesis for their nourishment. Animals need the
plants for food as well as oxygen. Only green plants are able to change
light energy into chemical energy stored in food, thus they are vital to
life on Earth.
Solar cells:
Conventional
solar cells are also called as Photo Voltaic Cells. These cells are
made out of semiconducting material, usually silicon. When light hits
the cells, they absorb energy though photons. This absorbed energy
knocks out electrons in the silicon, allowing them to flow. By adding
different impurities to the silicon such as phosphorus or boron, an
electric field can be established. This electric field acts as a diode,
because it only allows electrons to flow in one direction. Consequently,
the end result is a current of electrons, better known to us as
electricity.
Drawbacks of Solar cells:
They
can only achieve efficiencies around 10% and they are expensive to
manufacture. The first drawback, inefficiency, is almost unavoidable
with silicon cells. This is because the incoming photons, or light, must
have the right energy, called the band gap energy, to knock out an
electron. If the photon has less energy than the band gap energy then it
will pass through. If it has more energy than the band gap, then that
extra energy will be wasted as heat.
Artificial Leaf:
Mixing of Photosynthesis + Conventional Solar Cells + Hydrogen Fuel Cell
This
Leaf device combines a commercially available solar cell (Silicon) with
a pair of inexpensive catalysts made of Cobalt and Nickel that split
water into Oxygen and Hydrogen. The hydrogen can be stored and used as
an energy source. (For example to power a fuel cell).
The
collection and storage of the sun’s energy as hydrogen fuel is a key
step in overcoming one of the limitations of solar power — it generates
energy when the sun is shining, but it needs to be stored somewhere to
be useful at night and in cloudy weather. Batteries are one place to
store the energy, but it is limited. Storing solar energy as hydrogen
fuel could be an answer for producing the electricity continuously.
Using
this approach, a solar panel roughly one square meter bathed in water
could produce enough hydrogen to supply electricity for a house.


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