For the first time, scientists have manipulated low-energy long-wave photons, or normal light such as sunlight, and converted it into higher energy short-wave photons, laying the foundation for the creation of more efficient solar cells. Developed by a team of researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz and at the Sony Materials Science Laboratory in Stuttgart, the new process converts low-energy long-wave photons (light particles) into higher-energy short-wave photons through the combination of two light-active substances. This had previously only been achieved with a high-energy-density laser light which, under certain conditions, combines two low-energy photons into one high-energy photon -- a kind of photon fusion, the scientists said. Using two substances in solution, scientists have converted long-wave green light from a normal light source into short-wave blue light. Here, the green light directed into the solution reappears as blue light after it has been converted. (Photo: Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research) One reason the efficiency of solar cells today is limited is because the long-wave, low-energy part of sunlight cannot be used. A process that increases the low level of energy in the light particles in the long-wave range, shortening their wavelength, would make it possible for the solar cells to use those parts of light energy that, up to now, have been lost, resulting in a drastic increase in their efficiency, the researchers said. In developing their new process, the scientists used two substances in solution -- platinum octaethyl porphyrin and diphenylan-thracene -- that converted the long-wave green light from a normal light source into short-wave blue light. Similar to the process in laser light, this also pairs photons, but in a different way. When a molecule is manipulated by laser light to take up two photons, which is only probable if a laser beam is literally bombarded with photons, the molecules in this case only receive one photon. Two photon partners are brought together between the molecules via a different mechanism called triplet-triplet annihilation. By selecting different, corresponding "matchmaker" molecules, it is possible to combine the energy from photons from the whole of the sunlight spectrum. The two substances developed by the researchers as "photon matchmakers" have quite different properties. Whereas one serves as an "antenna" for green light (antenna molecules), the other pairs the photons, taking two low-energy green photons and making one high-energy blue photon, which it transmits as an emitter (emitter molecule). A schematic representation of the energy transfers. The antenna molecule (green with red platinum) receives the green photons (hv =light energy) and transfers them to the emitter molecule (blue). Subsequently, a blue photon is emitted. (Image: Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research) First the antenna molecule absorbs a green low-energy photon and passes it to the emitter molecule as a package of energy. Both molecules store the energy one after the other in "excited" states. Then two of the energy-loaded emitter molecules react with each other -- one molecule passes its energy package to the other. This returns one molecule to its low-energy state. The other, conversely, achieves a very high-energy state that stores the double energy package. This state collapses rapidly again when the large energy package is sent out as a blue photon. Although this light particle is of a shorter wavelength and higher in energy than the green light emitted initially, the end effect is that no energy is generated, but the energy from two photons is combined into one. The researchers said the process is very interesting in chemical terms, as the molecules must be carefully matched to allow the energy to be transmitted efficiently and neither the antenna nor the emitter molecules are allowed to lose their energy through shortcuts. The scientists had to synthesize an antenna molecule that absorbed long-wave light and stored it for so long that the energy could be transferred to an emitter. Only a complex metal organic compound with a platinum atom in a ring-shaped molecule was suitable for this purpose. The emitter molecule, on the other hand, must be able to take the energy package from the antenna and hold on to it until another excited emitter molecule is found for the subsequent photon fusion. As this procedure allows previously unused parts of sunlight to be used in solar cells, the scientists are hoping that it offers the ideal starting point for more efficient solar cells. To optimize the process and to bring it closer to an application, they are testing new pairs of substances for other colors in the light spectrum and are experimenting with integrating them in a polymer matrix. Their work is described in the Oct. 4 edition of Physical Review Letters. For more information, visit: www.mpg.de/english/portal/index.html