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In photochemistry, light provides the energetic push to drive chemical reactions. The area shows great promise for energy production and continuous-flow industrial transformations, but often, the chemically active molecules or crystals don’t absorb enough a wide enough spectrum of light. Photosensitizers, sometimes referred to colloquially as dyes, can get around that problem by capturing a broader array of photons and transferring their energy to catalytic species nearby. Researcher Ludovic Troian-Gautier and graduate student Alexia Ripak of the Catholic University of Louvain were working on iron(II) photosensitizers when Ripak noticed this lacy crystallization pattern in a piece of glassware.
Submitted by Ludovic Troian-Gautier
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