Photolysis in Photosystem II Splits Water to Produce Oxygen, Electrons, and Protons
Photolysis
Photolysis is the process of using light energy to split water molecules into oxygen, protons, and electrons.
- Photolysis occurs in photosystem II (PSII), specifically in a protein complex called the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC).
- This process is part of the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis and takes place in the thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts.
The reaction can be summarized as:
$$
2H_2O \rightarrow O_2 + 4H^+ + 4e^-
$$
For every two water molecules split, photolysis produces one oxygen molecule, four protons, and four electrons.
How Photolysis Works

Step 1: Light Absorption
- Chlorophyll molecules in photosystem II absorb photons of light.
- This energy excites electrons in a special chlorophyll molecule called P680 (named for the wavelength of light it absorbs—680 nm).
- The excited electrons are boosted to a higher energy level and leave P680.
Step 2: Electron Replacement
- When P680 loses electrons, it becomes positively charged and highly reactive.
- P680 must be "recharged" to continue functioning.
- The oxygen-evolving complex splits water molecules to provide replacement electrons.
- These electrons fill the "electron holes" left in P680, restoring it so it can be excited again by light.
Step 3: Release of Products
- As water is split, three products are generated:
- Electrons (e⁻): Replace electrons lost by P680, allowing the light-dependent reactions to continue.
- Protons (H⁺): Released into the thylakoid space, contributing to the proton gradient used for ATP synthesis via chemiosmosis (covered in the previous article).
- Oxygen (O₂): Oxygen atoms from split water molecules combine to form O₂ gas, which diffuses out of the chloroplast.
Photolysis only occurs in the presence of light, meaning it's directly driven by the energy from photons absorbed by PSII.
The Three Products Are Used Differently
- Electrons: Used in Photosynthesis
- Replace electrons lost by chlorophyll in photosystem II when light excites them.
- Flow through the electron transport chain.
- Eventually used to produce NADPH (covered in C1.3.13).



