Yang’s lab is improving on a basic design that was developed in the 1970s at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. It has two light-sensitive electrodes coated with a catalyst—Yang is using nickel, which is inexpensive—that together split water into oxygen and hydrogen. In the original setup, the electrodes were flat, but Yang instead uses arrays of nanowires made from silicon and other semiconductors. Because the nanowires have 100 times the surface area of flat electrodes that could fit into the same space, they can hold more of the catalyst, greatly boosting the efficiency of the reaction.

However, splitting water is the easy half of photosynthesis. Plants go further, using the hydrogen from water in reactions that turn carbon from the air into complex molecules. Yang wants to do this too. After all, our planes and cars don’t run on hydrogen; they need gasoline and other chemically complex fuels.

5. Inside this device, light ­powers a reaction in which water and ­carbon dioxide are ­converted to fuel. Tubing allows the reaction’s side product—pure ­oxygen—to escape.

6 and 7. Some bacteria in the system produce methane, which can be used directly as a fuel; others make acetate, which is fed to other genetically engineered bacteria to make fuels and plastics. Here, engineered E. coli feed on acetate.

8. Analytical tools including mass spectrometers are used to ­verify that the bacteria made the desired chemical. So far, the system is as efficient as natural photosynthesis.

To catalyze that part of the process, Yang relies on another technology that wasn’t around in the ’70s. He and colleagues have shown that genetically engineered bacteria nestled amid the nanowires function as “living catalysts.” They take up the hydrogen split from the water and combine it with carbon dioxide to make methane and other hydrocarbons that are needed for fuels or plastics. The bugs do this with natural enzymes that carry out a series of reactions chemists have not yet been able to master with synthetic catalysts.

Yang’s system currently matches the efficiency of photosynthesis, storing under 1 percent of the energy captured from sunlight in the form of chemical bonds. That’s not bad for a proof-of-concept demonstration, but making it more efficient and thus cost-effective will be essential.

Yang hopes to eventually switch to synthetic catalysts instead of bacteria, which are tricky to keep alive. But fully eliminating the bugs might not be necessary, given the urgent need for clean fuels. “If it has to be a hybrid approach, that’s okay,” he says.