PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Molecular ‘catapult’ fires electrons at the limits of physics

Cambridge scientists discover vibration-driven charge transfer faster than a single molecular vibration

2026-03-05
(Press-News.org) Electrons can be ‘kicked across’ solar materials at almost the fastest speed nature allows, scientists have discovered – challenging long-held theories about how solar energy systems work.

The finding could help researchers design more efficient ways of harvesting sunlight and converting it into electricity.

In experiments capturing events lasting just 18 femtoseconds – less than 20 quadrillionths of a second – researchers at the University of Cambridge observed charge separation happening within a single molecular vibration.

“We deliberately designed a system that, according to conventional theory, should not have transferred charge this fast,” said Dr Pratyush Ghosh, Research Fellow, at St John’s College, Cambridge, and first author of the study. “By conventional design rules, this system should have been slow and that’s what makes the result so striking.

“Instead of drifting randomly, the electron is launched in one coherent burst. The vibration acts like a molecular catapult. The vibrations don’t just accompany the process, they actively drive it.”

A femtosecond is one quadrillionth of a second – one second holds about eight times more femtoseconds than all the hours that have passed since the universe began. At that scale, atoms inside molecules are physically vibrating. 

The team observed charge transfer unfolding just as fast as the pace set by the molecule’s own motion. “We’re effectively watching electrons migrate on the same clock as the atoms themselves.”

The research, published in Nature Communications today (Thursday 5 March 2026), challenges decades of design rules in solar energy research. Until now, scientists believed ultrafast charge transfer required large energy differences between materials and strong electronic coupling, features that can reduce efficiency by limiting voltage and increasing energy loss.

When light strikes many carbon-based materials, it creates a tightly bound packet of energy called an exciton – a paired electron and hole. For solar cells, photodetectors and photocatalytic systems to work efficiently, that pair must rapidly split into free charges. The faster this separation happens, the less energy is lost. This ultrafast separation is one of the key steps that determines how efficiently solar panels and other light-harvesting devices can turn sunlight into usable energy.

To test whether that trade-off was unavoidable, the Cambridge team built a deliberately ‘weak’ system. A polymer donor and a non-fullerene acceptor were placed side by side with almost no energy offset and only minimal interaction – conditions that should have slowed charge transfer dramatically.

Instead, the electron crossed the interface in just 18 femtoseconds, which is much faster than many previously studied organic systems and occurring on the natural timescale of atomic motion. “Seeing it happen on this timescale within a single molecular vibration is extraordinary,” said Dr Ghosh.

Ultrafast laser measurements revealed why. After absorbing light, the polymer begins vibrating in specific high-frequency motions. These vibrations mix electronic states and effectively kick the electron across the boundary, producing directional, ballistic movement rather than slow, random diffusion.

Once the electron arrives at the acceptor molecule, it triggers a new coherent vibration, an unusual signature of such rapid transfer that has only rarely been observed in organic materials. “That coherent vibration is a clear fingerprint of how fast and how cleanly the transfer occurs.

“Our results show that the ultimate speed of charge separation isn’t determined only by static electronic structure,” said Dr Ghosh. “It depends on how molecules vibrate. That gives us a new design principle. In a way, this gives us a new rulebook. Instead of fighting molecular vibrations, we can learn how to use the right ones.”

The discovery reveals a new pathway to designing more efficient light-harvesting technologies. Ultrafast charge separation underpins systems such as organic solar cells, photodetectors and photocatalytic devices used to produce clean hydrogen fuel and similar processes occur in natural photosynthesis.

Professor Akshay Rao, Professor of Physics at the Cavendish Laboratory and former St John’s College Research Associate, who was a co-author of the study, said: “Instead of trying to suppress molecular motion, we can now design materials that use it – turning vibrations from a limitation into a tool.”

The study involved researchers at the Cavendish Laboratory and the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge, including Dr Rakesh Arul, St John’s College Research Fellow, alongside collaborators in Italy, Sweden, the United States, Poland and Belgium.

Reference 
Pratyush Ghosh et al, Vibronically Assisted Sub-Cycle Charge Transfer at a Non-Fullerene Acceptor Heterojunction (Nature Communications). DOI 10.1038/s41467-026-70292-8.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researcher finds evidence supporting sucrose can help manage painful procedures in infants

2026-03-05
Mariana Bueno, an Assistant Professor at the Lawrence Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, is the lead author of a recently published Cochrane review investigating the administration of sucrose as a form of pain management for hospitalized infants who undergo venepuncture. The review which included studies worldwide, found that sucrose administration stood out as an effective and safe option to manage pain and provide comfort to babies during venepuncture, especially when compared to no treatment. “Giving infants a pacifier in addition ...

New study identifies key factors supporting indigenous well-being

2026-03-05
The study is among the first to examine strengths-based indicators of well-being in a large, population-level Indigenous sample. Healthy functioning was significantly associated with never smoking, being physically active, having fewer chronic health conditions, and meeting basic financial needs. These results challenge deficit-focused narratives that blame individuals or groups rather than policies, socioeconomic conditions, and other structural issues. Instead, they underscore the value of identifying factors that support thriving in Indigenous communities. “Understanding wellness among Indigenous Peoples requires recognizing both the structural barriers created ...

Bureaucracy Index 2026: Business sector hit hardest

2026-03-05
The Bureaucracy Index, which tracks the growth in the volume of applicable German federal laws, has once again reached a record high. Since 2010, the volume of legislation has risen steadily, with no structural reversal in sight. The scope of legislation continued to rise in 2025. Despite commitments to reducing bureaucracy, regulation has not eased. The Bureaucracy Index is compiled jointly by university professor Dr. Stefan Wagner of the University of Vienna in collaboration with ESMT Berlin ...

ECMWF’s portable global forecasting model OpenIFS now available for all

2026-03-05
A portable version of the global model used by ECMWF to produce medium-range weather forecasts is being made openly available to all for the first time. The OpenIFS model, a version of the Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) used for research, education and training, has, until now, only been available for use under licence, for example within an institution. Now, ECMWF is making OpenIFS’s forecasts fully open source. The change will make it easier to collaborate and generate new ideas, with everyone having access to the same version of the data. “Opening ...

Yale study challenges notion that aging means decline, finds many older adults improve over time

2026-03-05
Aging in later life is often portrayed as a steady slide toward physical and cognitive decline. But a new study by scientists at Yale University suggests an alternate narrative — that older individuals can and do improve over time and their mindset toward aging plays a major part in their success. Analyzing more than a decade of data from a large, nationally representative study of older Americans, lead author Becca R. Levy, a professor of social and behavioral sciences at the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH), found that nearly half of adults aged 65 and older showed measurable improvement in cognitive function, physical function, or both, ...

Korean researchers enable early detection of brain disorders with a single drop of saliva!

2026-03-05
  A team of Korean researchers has, for the first time in the world, developed a technology capable of enabling early diagnosis of major neurological disorders including epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, and schizophrenia using only a small amount of saliva. This study was conducted jointly by a research team led by Dr. Sung-Gyu Park of the Advanced Bio and Healthcare Materials Research Division at the Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS), together with Prof. Ho Sang Jung’s team at Korea University and researchers from the College of Medicine at The Catholic University of Korea. The research ...

Swipe right, but safer

2026-03-05
To address persistent concerns about harassment, boundary violation and user safety in digital dating spaces, a research team led by the University of Waterloo has launched an interactive Safety Map to coincide with International Women’s Day. Hundreds of millions of people use dating apps worldwide, with younger adults aged 18 to 34 being the most active users. In Canada, for example, roughly one in three people report having ...

Duke-NUS scientists identify more effective way to detect poultry viruses in live markets

2026-03-05
SINGAPORE, 5 MARCH 2026—Scientists at Duke-NUS Medical School have found that viruses circulating in live poultry markets can be detected more effectively by sampling the surrounding environment than by testing individual birds. The study, published in Nature Communications, shows that environmental sampling can uncover a broader range of poultry viruses—including highly pathogenic avian influenza strains that traditional surveillance may miss. Live poultry markets are widely used across Asia, supplying fresh food and supporting livelihoods. However, they are also settings where humans and animals interact closely, increasing the risk of viruses crossing ...

Low-intensity treadmill exercise preconditioning mitigates post-stroke injury in mouse models

2026-03-05
The team led by Prof. Lin Zhu from Guangzhou Sport University have demonstrated that 4-week low-intensity treadmill exercise before the onset of an ischemic stroke can significantly reduce brain injury and improve neurological outcomes. This study, published in Translational Exercise Biomedicine (ISSN: 2942-6812), an official partner journal of International Federation of Sports Medicine (FIMS), offers a promising, non-pharmacological strategy for the millions of people worldwide at risk of this ...

How moss helped solve a grave-robbing mystery

2026-03-05
In 2009, a scandal was exposed at a cemetery just outside of Chicago. Workers at Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois, were accused of exhuming old graves, dumping the remains elsewhere on the cemetery grounds, and reselling the burial plots. When the case went to trial in 2015, one key piece of evidence was a tiny clump of moss. In a new study in the journal Forensic Sciences Research, researchers are sharing the first full scientific account of the case, detailing precisely how moss played a role in proving that a ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Reconstructing the world’s ant diversity in 3D

UMD entomologist helps bring the world’s ant diversity to life in 3D imagery

ESA’s Mars orbiters watch solar superstorm hit the Red Planet

The secret lives of catalysts: How microscopic networks power reactions

Molecular ‘catapult’ fires electrons at the limits of physics

Researcher finds evidence supporting sucrose can help manage painful procedures in infants

New study identifies key factors supporting indigenous well-being

Bureaucracy Index 2026: Business sector hit hardest

ECMWF’s portable global forecasting model OpenIFS now available for all

Yale study challenges notion that aging means decline, finds many older adults improve over time

Korean researchers enable early detection of brain disorders with a single drop of saliva!

Swipe right, but safer

Duke-NUS scientists identify more effective way to detect poultry viruses in live markets

Low-intensity treadmill exercise preconditioning mitigates post-stroke injury in mouse models

How moss helped solve a grave-robbing mystery

How much sleep do teens get? Six-seven hours.

Patients regain weight rapidly after stopping weight loss drugs – but still keep off a quarter of weight lost

GLP-1 diabetes drugs linked to reduced risk of addiction and substance-related death

Councils face industry legal threats for campaigns warning against wood burning stoves

GLP-1 medications get at the heart of addiction: study

Global trauma study highlights shared learning as interest in whole blood resurges

Almost a third of Gen Z men agree a wife should obey her husband

Trapping light on thermal photodetectors shatters speed records

New review highlights the future of tubular solid oxide fuel cells for clean energy systems

Pig farm ammonia pollution may indirectly accelerate climate warming, new study finds

Modified biochar helps compost retain nitrogen and build richer soil organic matter

First gene regulation clinical trials for epilepsy show promising results

Life-changing drug identified for children with rare epilepsy

Husker researchers collaborate to explore fear of spiders

Mayo Clinic researchers discover hidden brain map that may improve epilepsy care

[Press-News.org] Molecular ‘catapult’ fires electrons at the limits of physics
Cambridge scientists discover vibration-driven charge transfer faster than a single molecular vibration