4.6 Article

Bio-inspired natural sunlight-pumped lasers

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/ac2852

Keywords

sunlight-pumped lasing; bio-inspired photonic devices; organic nanophotonics; novel lasing approaches; photosynthetic quantum technologies

Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/T007214/1, EP/L015110/1]
  2. MAECI project [PGR06314]
  3. Royal Society of Edinburgh
  4. Scottish Government
  5. ConaCyt Ciencia Basica project [A1-S-22706]
  6. European Union (EU) Horizon 2020 program in the framework of the European Training Network ColOpt [721465]

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The study proposes a bio-inspired approach to upgrade natural sunlight to a coherent laser beam. By using a molecular aggregate inspired by photosynthetic complexes in purple bacteria as the laser medium, researchers aim to achieve lasing under natural sunlight. This novel design also paves the way for developing other bio-inspired quantum devices.
Even though sunlight is by far the most abundant renewable energy source available to humanity, its dilute and variable nature has kept efficient ways to collect, store, and distribute this energy tantalisingly out of reach. Turning the incoherent energy supply provided by the Sun into a coherent laser beam would overcome several of the practical limitations inherent in using sunlight as a source of clean energy: laser beams travel nearly losslessly over large distances, and they are effective at driving chemical reactions which convert sunlight into chemical energy. Here we propose a bio-inspired blueprint for a novel type of laser with the aim of upgrading unconcentrated natural sunlight into a coherent laser beam. Our proposed design constitutes a novel and different path towards sunlight-pumped lasers. In order to achieve lasing with the extremely dilute power provided by natural sunlight, we here propose a laser medium comprised of molecular aggregates inspired by the architecture of natural photosynthetic complexes. Such complexes exhibit a very large internal efficiency in harvesting photons from a power source as dilute as natural sunlight. Specifically, we consider a hybrid structure, where photosynthetic complexes in purple bacteria (Rhodobacter sphaeroides) surround a suitably engineered molecular dimer composed of two strongly coupled chromophores. We show that if pumped by the surrounding photosynthetic complex, which efficiently collects and concentrates solar energy, the core dimer structure can reach population inversion, and reach the lasing threshold under natural sunlight. The design principles proposed here will also pave the way for developing other bio-inspired quantum devices.

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