Abstract

Experiments have shown that photon exploitation efficiency in unicellular algal biomass production under a pulsed-light regime with a high-photon flux is higher than the efficiency under continuous illumination with the same flux. This observation has been explained theoretically to be a consequence of the improved efficiency of exploitation of photons by Photosystem II (PS II) thanks to the combined effect of photon-absorption statistics, a rate-limiting time scale and the size of the PQ pool.Exploiting the same ideas, it is shown in this paper that, under a pulsed-light regime, there is a pulse-time length, for which the average exploitation efficiency of PS II absorbed photons is maximal. Under ideal conditions, this maximum is close to 100%. The optimal pulse-time length is roughly proportional to the size of the PQ pool, NPQ. This is clearly seen for τ (the average time gap between consecutive photons absorbed by the PS II-Chlorophyll antenna) of the order of 1 ms or less (corresponding to a high photon flux and/or a large photon absorption cross-section area of the antenna) and for small NPQ. The width of the plot of efficiency vs. pulse length around the optimum is then small and the optimal pulse length is well defined. As τ is increased beyond 1 or NPQ becomes large, the width grows, allowing for a broad choice of pulse lengths, for which efficiency is very close to the maximum.These observations open the door to future designs of highly productive bioreactors.

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