Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SciTechDaily
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth
    • Health
    • Physics
    • Science
    • Space
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube RSS
    SciTechDaily
    Home»Physics»Engineered Viruses Provide Quantum-Based Enhancement of Energy Transport
    Physics

    Engineered Viruses Provide Quantum-Based Enhancement of Energy Transport

    By David L. Chandler, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyOctober 15, 20151 Comment6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit
    Quantum Physics Meets Genetic Engineering
    Rendering of a virus used in the MIT experiments. The light-collecting centers, called chromophores, are in red, and chromophores that just absorbed a photon of light are glowing white. After the virus is modified to adjust the spacing between the chromophores, energy can jump from one set of chromophores to the next faster and more efficiently. Credit: Courtesy of the researchers and Lauren Aleza Kaye

    In a newly published study, a team of scientists detail how they used genetically engineered viruses to enhance energy transport in genetically engineered excitonic networks.

    Nature has had billions of years to perfect photosynthesis, which directly or indirectly supports virtually all life on Earth. In that time, the process has achieved almost 100 percent efficiency in transporting the energy of sunlight from receptors to reaction centers where it can be harnessed — a performance vastly better than even the best solar cells.

    One way plants achieve this efficiency is by making use of the exotic effects of quantum mechanics — effects sometimes known as “quantum weirdness.” These effects, which include the ability of a particle to exist in more than one place at a time, have now been used by engineers at MIT to achieve a significant efficiency boost in a light-harvesting system.

    Surprisingly, the MIT researchers achieved this new approach to solar energy not with high-tech materials or microchips — but by using genetically engineered viruses.

    This achievement in coupling quantum research and genetic manipulation, described this week in the journal Nature Materials, was the work of MIT professors Angela Belcher, an expert on engineering viruses to carry out energy-related tasks, and Seth Lloyd, an expert on quantum theory and its potential applications; research associate Heechul Park; and 14 collaborators at MIT and in Italy.

    Lloyd, a professor of mechanical engineering, explains that in photosynthesis, a photon hits a receptor called a chromophore, which in turn produces an exciton — a quantum particle of energy. This exciton jumps from one chromophore to another until it reaches a reaction center, where that energy is harnessed to build the molecules that support life.

    But the hopping pathway is random and inefficient unless it takes advantage of quantum effects that allow it, in effect, to take multiple pathways at once and select the best ones, behaving more like a wave than a particle.


    See how researchers genetically engineer viruses to more efficiently transport energy. Video courtesy of the researchers (additional editing by Melanie Gonick/MIT)

    This efficient movement of excitons has one key requirement: The chromophores have to be arranged just right, with exactly the right amount of space between them. This, Lloyd explains, is known as the “Quantum Goldilocks Effect.”

    That’s where the virus comes in. By engineering a virus that Belcher has worked with for years, the team was able to get it to bond with multiple synthetic chromophores — or, in this case, organic dyes. The researchers were then able to produce many varieties of the virus, with slightly different spacings between those synthetic chromophores, and select the ones that performed best.

    In the end, they were able to more than double excitons’ speed, increasing the distance they traveled before dissipating — a significant improvement in the efficiency of the process.

    The project started from a chance meeting at a conference in Italy. Lloyd and Belcher, a professor of biological engineering, were reporting on different projects they had worked on, and began discussing the possibility of a project encompassing their very different expertise. Lloyd, whose work is mostly theoretical, pointed out that the viruses Belcher works with have the right length scales to potentially support quantum effects.

    In 2008, Lloyd had published a paper demonstrating that photosynthetic organisms transmit light energy efficiently because of these quantum effects. When he saw Belcher’s report on her work with engineered viruses, he wondered if that might provide a way to artificially induce a similar effect, in an effort to approach nature’s efficiency.

    “I had been talking about potential systems you could use to demonstrate this effect, and Angela said, ‘We’re already making those,’” Lloyd recalls. Eventually, after much analysis, “We came up with design principles to redesign how the virus is capturing light, and get it to this quantum regime.”

    Within two weeks, Belcher’s team had created their first test version of the engineered virus. Many months of work then went into perfecting the receptors and the spacings.

    Once the team engineered the viruses, they were able to use laser spectroscopy and dynamical modeling to watch the light-harvesting process in action, and to demonstrate that the new viruses were indeed making use of quantum coherence to enhance the transport of excitons.

    “It was really fun,” Belcher says. “A group of us who spoke different [scientific] languages worked closely together, to both make this class of organisms, and analyze the data. That’s why I’m so excited by this.”

    While this initial result is essentially a proof of concept rather than a practical system, it points the way toward an approach that could lead to inexpensive and efficient solar cells or light-driven catalysis, the team says. So far, the engineered viruses collect and transport energy from incoming light, but do not yet harness it to produce power (as in solar cells) or molecules (as in photosynthesis). But this could be done by adding a reaction center, where such processing takes place, to the end of the virus where the excitons end up.

    “This is exciting and high-quality research,” says Alán Aspuru-Guzik, a professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Harvard University who was not involved in this work. The research, he says, “combines the work of a leader in theory (Lloyd) and a leader in experiment (Belcher) in a truly multidisciplinary and exciting combination that spans biology to physics to potentially, future technology.”

    “​Access to controllable excitonic systems is a goal shared by many researchers in the field,” Aspuru-Guzik adds. “This work provides fundamental understanding that can allow for the development of devices with an increased control of exciton flow.”

    Reference: “Enhanced energy transport in genetically engineered excitonic networks” by Heechul Park, Nimrod Heldman, Patrick Rebentrost, Luigi Abbondanza, Alessandro Iagatti, Andrea Alessi, Barbara Patrizi, Mario Salvalaggio, Laura Bussotti, Masoud Mohseni, Filippo Caruso, Hannah C. Johnsen, Roberto Fusco, Paolo Foggi, Petra F. Scudo, Seth Lloyd and Angela M. Belcher, 12 October 2015, Nature Materials.
    DOI: 10.1038/nmat4448

    The research was supported by the Italian energy company Eni through the MIT Energy Initiative. In addition to MIT postdocs Nimrod Heldman and Patrick Rebentrost, the team included researchers at the University of Florence, the University of Perugia, and Eni.

    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    Follow us on Google and Google News.

    Biomedical Engineering Excitons Materials Science MIT Quantum Mechanics
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

    Related Articles

    Cracking the Secrets of an Emerging Branch of Physics: Exotic Properties to Power Real-World Applications

    Graphene Effectively Filters Electrons According to the Direction of Their Spin

    Study Shows Creation of Entanglement Simultaneously Gives Rise to a Wormhole

    Scientists Probe the Properties of a Fluctuating Magnetism Known as a Spin-Liquid State

    Scientists Reveal Quantum Behavior in Fluid Dynamics

    Metamaterials Amplify the Photonic Spin Hall Effect

    Atomic Collapse State Observed on Graphene

    The Experimental Design of a Space-Time Crystal

    New System Converts Laser Beam Into Controlled Stream of Single Photons

    1 Comment

    1. Madanagopal.V.C. on October 18, 2015 9:29 am

      These organic photo voltaic cells are excellent discovery. Einstein first found photo electric effect with semi conductors where sun light transports electrons in these semi conductors. Now, the nature has given us another good idea where sunlight is harvested by chlorophyl in plants to split the water into Hydrogen and Oxygen and start a current to manufacture carbohydrates (C12H22O11)n.. from atmospheric CO2 and H2O from the ground or air. Synthetic chromophores from photosynthetic organisms imbibed with modified viruses to conduct photons very efficiently, is employed in this system, which is a shade higher than nature’s photosynthesis. These solar cells will be effective.. But, can we make them commercial and get its benefits ? They may at best be a laboratory model. Thank You.

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube

    Don't Miss a Discovery

    Subscribe for the Latest in Science & Tech!

    Trending News

    Breakthrough Bowel Cancer Trial Leaves Patients Cancer-Free for Nearly 3 Years

    Natural Compound Shows Powerful Potential Against Rheumatoid Arthritis

    100,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Fossils in Poland Reveal Unexpected Genetic Connections

    Simple “Gut Reset” May Prevent Weight Gain After Ozempic or Wegovy

    2.8 Days to Disaster: Scientists Warn Low Earth Orbit Could Suddenly Collapse

    Common Food Compound Shows Surprising Power Against Superbugs

    5 Simple Ways To Remember More and Forget Less

    The Atomic Gap That Could Cost the Semiconductor Industry Billions

    Follow SciTechDaily
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Pinterest
    • Newsletter
    • RSS
    SciTech News
    • Biology News
    • Chemistry News
    • Earth News
    • Health News
    • Physics News
    • Science News
    • Space News
    • Technology News
    Recent Posts
    • Powerful Antioxidant Found To Play a Key Role in Proper Protein Folding
    • MIT Laser Breakthrough Lets Scientists Watch Drugs Enter the Brain in Real Time
    • Study Reveals Malaria’s Hidden Role in Human Evolution
    • Scientists Print Artificial Neurons That Can Talk to the Brain
    • Bowel and Ovarian Cancers Are Dramatically Rising in Young Adults and Scientists Aren’t Sure Why
    Copyright © 1998 - 2026 SciTechDaily. All Rights Reserved.
    • Science News
    • About
    • Contact
    • Editorial Board
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.