What You Need to Know About Sunscreen Protection


is sunscreen safe

Story at-a-glance

  • Rates for melanoma skin cancers began to climb in the 1970s, rising 200 percent between 1975 and 2013
  • Although sunscreen is recommended to reduce skin aging and your risk of skin cancer, many products have just the opposite effect as they filter only UVB and not the more dangerous UVA
  • Some sunscreens use chemicals that may increase your risk of skin cancer and may contain hormone disrupters. Your best sun protection comes from hats, sunglasses, clothing, zinc oxide and astaxanthin

For decades, doctors and the media have recommended you apply sunscreen before going outside.

According to the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD), everyone should use sunscreen for protection from the sun’s ultraviolet rays, believed to be the trigger for skin cancer and the precursor to wrinkles and premature aging.1

However, the recommendations don’t include the kind of sunscreen that is effective, nor do the recommendations advise you how to use the sun effectively to protect yourself from skin cancer and improve your vitamin D level, which has significant health benefits, including a lowered risk of melanoma.

To date, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not have regulations governing advertising and claims for sunscreen.2 In 2011, the FDA banned the use of terms on sunscreen making inflated claims, such as “all day protection” and “sweat-” or “waterproof.”

The Environmental Working Group (EWG) recently released their 2016 list of best and worst sunscreens3 based on criteria such as level of protection and safety of the product, to guide your use of sunscreens this season.

Just remember, companies can change their ingredients, so always read the labels of the products you purchase.

Are Sunscreens the Right Way to Prevent Sunburn and Skin Cancer?

Despite the availability of sunscreen products and media coverage about using sun protection, the number of people suffering from malignant melanoma of the skin continues to rise each year. The number of new cases of skin cancer per 100,000 people has risen from 7.9 in 1975 to 24 people in 2013.4

This represents a consistent average 3 percent rise each year in newly diagnosed cases and a 200 percent rise from 1975 to 2013.

Ultraviolet radiation reaches the earth as UVA and UVB light, and has been classified as a human carcinogen by the National Toxicology Program (NTP).5 UVA is generally considered to be less carcinogenic than UVB.

Because it was believed UVB light was more dangerous, sunscreen products were first developed to filter UVB and not UVA. However, recent research has demonstrated UVA radiation actually plays an important role in the development of malignant melanoma, the most aggressive form of skin cancer.

According to estimates, more than 144,000 Americans will be diagnosed with melanoma in 2016, with five-year survival rates starting at 98 percent if the cancer has not reached the lymph nodes, 63 percent for regional cancer and dropping to 17 percent for distant-stage melanoma.6

A number of studies demonstrate sunscreen reduces the number of new squamous cell skin cancers, but has no effect on basal cell and may actually contribute to the development of the more aggressive malignant melanoma.7

There is some evidence that non-melanoma and easily treated skin cancers are related to cumulative exposure to the sun. However, that is not the case with malignant melanoma, linked with significant sunburns.8

The American Cancer Society recommends sunscreen should be used as a filter, and not a reason to stay longer in the sun. For extended outings, they recommend other methods of sun protection, even when properly using sunscreen, such as hats, sunglasses, clothing and shade.9

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Surveys from the AAD have demonstrated that many are not aware of how to use the sunscreen effectively.10 However, even when used correctly, not all sunscreen products contain what’s advertised on the bottle.

In one test, researchers evaluated the SPF value of 65 different products to find 43 percent had less SPF than promised on the label.11

Sunscreen also blocks your body’s ability to manufacture vitamin D, although several studies have demonstrated that most people don’t use adequate amounts of sunscreen to negatively affect their vitamin D levels.12,13,14,15 Still, this certainly is a concern, especially if you wear sunscreen all the time.

In such a case, you may want to consider getting your vitamin D level tested, and if below the clinically relevant level of 40 nanograms per milliliter, you’d be wise to consider a vitamin D supplement. Still, supplements cannot provide the identical benefits of sensible sun exposure.

The amount of sunscreen needed to protect your skin from burning also increases the amount of toxic chemicals you use.

Even studies from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), demonstrate 97 percent of people living in the U.S. are contaminated with a toxic ingredient widely used in sunscreens, called oxybenzone.16

Oxybenzone is commonly found in sunscreens and other personal care products. EWG identified nearly 600 different sunscreen products containing oxybenzone.

Mothers with high levels of the chemical have a higher risk of giving birth to low birthweight babies, a critical risk factor linked to cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension and other diseases.17

What Do the Numbers Really Mean?

Sunscreens may also give you a false sense of security. Many consumers believe the higher the SPF number, the greater the protection against UV radiation. However, as mentioned earlier, most sunscreens protect against UVB but don’t have adequate protection against UVA radiation.

Both UVA and UVB can cause tanning and burning, although UVB does so far more rapidly. UVA, however, penetrates the skin more deeply than UVB, and may be a much more important factor in photoaging, wrinkles and skin cancers.

An SPF of 30 will theoretically filter 97 percent of the UVB rays for two hours.18Theoretically, a higher SPF will block more of the sun’s UVB rays, but no sunscreen will block 100 percent.

The problem is, if you’re not experiencing skin reddening, you may be tempted to prolong the time you stay in the sun. This raises your risk of overexposure, which is the real danger with sun exposure.

Sunscreens with a higher SPF also require more chemicals to achieve the intended result. Many pose a health risk when they are absorbed through the skin, potentially causing tissue damage and disrupting your hormonal balance.

Because you don’t experience better protection with higher SPF numbers, it’s usually best to stick with SPF 30 if you choose to use sunscreen.

How They Work

In order for sunscreens to be effective, you must apply large amounts over all exposed areas of your skin. This means the product should not trigger skin allergies and must provide good protection against UV radiation. It also should NOT be absorbed into your skin, as the most effective sunscreen acts as a topical barrier.

Sunscreens work based on one of two mechanisms. Older products sat on the top of your skin, causing UV rays to bounce off. Most contained zinc oxide or titanium dioxide.

The second type uses chemical filters to block UV radiation. Many of those include octisalate, oxybenzone, avobenzone, homosalate, octinoxate and octocrylene.19

Several of these chemicals are hormone disruptors that have been shown to alter reproductive ability, delay puberty, alter estrous cycles in mice, reduce sperm counts in animal studies, and alter thyroid function.

Other chemicals, such as retinyl palmitate, may actually increase your risk of developing skin cancer. This product is a form of vitamin A that may speed the development of tumors and lesions when exposed to sunlight.

Manufacturers sometimes add it to products to slow skin aging.20 However, that only holds true in the absence of sun exposure.

Mechanical sunscreens, including zinc oxide, have proven over years of use to be a safe and effective means of blocking both UVA and UVB light.21

In light of recent media coverage, some companies are using zinc oxide to block UV radiation, while attempting to meet the desire of their consumers for products that don’t leave a thick film on the skin.

Nanotechnology and What It Does

To reduce the thick film, manufacturers are reducing the size of the molecules. This nanotechnology has several different effects. The particles are so small they may be absorbed into your skin. Some studies have found significant negative health effects from the absorption of nanoparticles.22 While excellent as a drug delivery system, it is questionable for use in sunscreen.23

Reducing the size of the zinc oxide particles improves the UVB protection but reduces the UVA protection, one of the important benefits of using zinc oxide as a sunscreen.24 Zinc oxide is beneficial because it remains stable in heat, but as a nanoparticle, the problems with toxicity probably outweigh the benefits to sun protection.

Toxicity of zinc oxide nanoparticles, after systemic distribution, may affect your lungs, liver, kidneys, stomach, pancreas, spleen, heart and brain.25 Findings have also demonstrated that aging has a synergistic effect with zinc oxide nanoparticles on systemic inflammation and neurotoxicity, affecting your brain and neurological system. In other words, the older you are, the higher your risk of neurotoxicity from zinc oxide nanoparticle absorption.

Is Sunscreen a Scam?

Until around 1950, melanoma was rarely diagnosed. The numbers didn’t rise until the late 1960s, just after “tanning lotion” was introduced on the market. The idea behind the lotion was the longer you could stay in the sun without burning, the more likely you would tan.

The standard explanation for the rare diagnosis of melanoma prior to the 1970s was that Americans started sunbathing in earnest in the 1950s. However, any image of the beaches from the 1930s and earlier would demonstrate that people enjoyed the sun and ocean long before the 1950s. The higher the rates of melanoma diagnosed per year, the greater the call to use sunscreen.

Interestingly, the prognosis or outcome of a diagnosis of melanoma may be linked to your levels of vitamin D. In a ground-breaking study, researchers demonstrated a link between levels of vitamin D and outcomes in individuals diagnosed with melanoma, after adjusting for C-reactive protein levels.26

Prior studies demonstrated a link between C-reactive proteins and poor outcomes after diagnosis with melanoma. This study looked at the association between vitamin D, an inflammatory response, and C-reactive proteins in a sample of over 1,000 patients. An investigation of several biomarkers suggested increasing vitamin D may improve five-year survival rates.

From the Inside Out

You can boost your internal ability to offset UVA and UVB radiation through the nutrients you eat each day. Antioxidants found in colorful fruits and veggies have been shown to have protective effects, but the real “superstar” is the fat-soluble carotenoid astaxanthin, which is what gives krill, salmon, and flamingos their pink color.27

Astaxanthin is produced by the microalgae Haematococcus pluvialis when its water supply dries up, forcing it to protect itself from ultraviolet radiation. It is this “radiation shield” mechanism that helps explain how astaxanthin can help protect you from similar radiation.

When you consume this pigment, you are essentially creating your own “internal sunscreen.” Research has confirmed it’s a potent UVB absorber that helps reduce DNA damage. It’s actually one of the most potent antioxidants known, acting against inflammation, oxidative stress and free radical damage throughout your body.

Each of these functions improves the ability of your skin to handle sun without burning, while giving your body the best advantage to manufacturing vitamin D. This is not a free pass to spending all day in the sun without physical protection, such as hat and long-sleeved clothing, but it does give you a healthier option than using chemicals to filter UV radiation.

Your Best and Worst Sunscreen Choices

Your safest and best choice for sunscreen protection is zinc oxide. Avoid nano versions however, to circumvent potential toxicity. Unfortunately, it can be challenging to find a product without other chemically based sunscreen filters. To help you choose the product best for your family, EWG performs an annual sunscreen evaluation based on effectiveness and safety.

Sixty brands received the EWG’s low-hazard ingredient list ranking this year. Their report published the best and worst choices for children, but only the best choices for adults.28,29,30 Here’s a sampling of the best and worst:

Best for Adults and Children

Adults Children
All Good Sport Sunscreen, SPF 33 Adorable Baby Sunscreen Lotion, SPF 30+
All Terrain TerraSport Sunscreen Lotion, SPF 30 All Good Kid’s Sunscreen, SPF 33
Babo Botanicals Clear Zinc Sunscreen Lotion, Fragrance Free, SPF 30 All Terrain KidSport Sunscreen Lotion, SPF 30
Badger Sunscreen Cream and Lotion, SPF 25, 30, and 35 ATTITUDE Little Ones 100% Mineral Sunscreen, Fragrance Free, SPF 30
Bare Belly Organics Face Stick Sunscreen, SPF 34 Badger Kids Sunscreen Cream, SPF 30
Burt’s Bees Baby Bee Sunscreen Stick, SPF 30 BabyHampton beach*bum sunscreen, SPF 30
Goddess Garden Facial Natural Sunscreen, SPF 30 Bare Belly Organics Baby Sunscreen, SPF 30
Kabana Organic Skincare Green Screen D Sunscreen, Original, SPF 35 Belly Buttons & Babies Sunscreen Lotion, SPF 30
Nature’s Gate Sport Vegan Sunscreen, SPF 50 Blue Lizard Australian Sunscreen, Baby, SPF 30+
The Honest Company Sunscreen Stick, SPF 30 BurnOut Kids Physical Sunscreen, SPF 35
Tropical Sands Sunscreen, SPF 15, 30, and 50 California Baby Super Sensitive Sunscreen, SPF 30+

Worst for Children

Banana Boat Kids Max Protect & Play Sunscreen Lotion, SPF 100 Coppertone Water Babies Sunscreen Stick, SPF 55 Coppertone Sunscreen Continuous Spray, Kids, SPF 70 Coppertone Sunscreen Lotion Kids, SPF 70+
Coppertone Foaming Lotion Sunscreen Kids Wacky Foam, SPF 70+ Coppertone Water Babies Sunscreen Lotion, SPF 70+ CVS Baby Sunstick Sunscreen, SPF 55 CVS Kids Wet & Dry Sunscreen Spray, SPF 70+
Equate Kids Sunscreen Stick, SPF 55 Hampton Sun Continuous Mist Sunscreen For Kids, SPF 70 Neutrogena Wet Skin Kids Sunscreen Spray, SPF 70+ Neutrogena Wet Skin Kids Sunscreen Stick, SPF 70+
Up & Up Kids Sunscreen Stick, SPF 55

Source:mercola.com

Drinkable Sunscreen to Avoid Cancer?


Your body naturally makes vitamin D when your skin is exposed to the sun. The benefits of optimizing your vitamin D stores cannot be overstated. Ironically, one of the benefits is actually a significant reduction in cancer risk — both skin cancer and many other types of cancer.

Using Sunscreen

Story at-a-glance

  • Your body requires sun exposure to manufacture vitamin D, responsible for preventing a number of different negative health conditions
  • A new drinkable sunscreen provides internal protection using nutrients, but is also loaded with carbohydrates
  • You can improve your own photoprotection with several different nutrients, including astaxanthin, polypodium leucotomos, lycopene and a combination of vitamins C, E and polyphenols

While sensible sun exposure is necessary for adequate production of natural vitamin D, if you have to remain in the sun for long hours during the day you’ll need safe protection to prevent sunburn. Sun exposure is only therapeutic when it’s done in appropriate and measured timeframes.

One-third of all Americans don’t use sunscreen and 69 percent only use it occasionally.1 Just under 15 percent of men and 30 percent of women report they regularly use sunscreen to protect their faces and other exposed skin when they plan to be in the sun for long periods of time.2

Excessive sun exposure provides no benefit and can only result in damage like sunburn, which is an inflammatory response in your skin to ultraviolet (UV) overexposure.

Both ultraviolet A (UVA) and ultraviolet B (UVB) can cause burning, although UVB does so far more rapidly. UVA, however, penetrates your skin more deeply than UVB, and may be a more important factor in photoaging, wrinkles and skin cancers.

UVB exposure is what converts a cholesterol derivative in your body into vitamin D3. And UVB is just what sunscreens are designed to shield, thereby severely limiting or eliminating your chances of making any vitamin D.

When your job or plans include spending more time in the sun than your skin is able to handle without burning, it’s important to find protection that’s safe, effective and easy to use.

Can You Drink Your Sunscreen?

The annual revenue in the cosmetic industry is close to $57 billion dollars, over 50 percent of which is spent on skincare and makeup.3 People are willing to pay to look younger and have healthy skin. Your youthful appearance doesn’t begin on the outside, but rather starts with the nutrients you eat.

Protecting your skin from overexposure to the sun, while balancing your body’s need for natural vitamin D production, was the reason Dr. Bobby Awadalla, a dermatologist from California developed a new kind of sun protection you drink.4 Awadalla says,

“I would see patients every day [who] had long- and short-term effects of sun damage. And despite the consequences, they were hesitant to use sunscreen.”

Currently, only one study supports the use of the vitamin cocktail he produces in liquid or powder form. The study appears to support his claim the mixture of nutrients will protect your skin from the harmful effects of UVA and UVB rays for up to five hours.5

However, even Awadalla freely admits his product isn’t potent enough to use alone.6He suggests using his product as an adjunct to your sun protection and it may help to soothe your skin after overexposure or help repair long-term sun damage.7

While his product is loaded with antioxidants and nutrients with proven effects on your skin, the first four ingredients are water, orange juice, peach juice and sugar. The carbohydrates in this 60-calorie drink total a whopping 28 grams.8

Product labeling recommends you drink one bottle 30 minutes prior to sun exposure and again later in the day to help repair damage from the sun. This equates to 46 grams of carbohydrates in the supplement you use to prevent sun damage.

This Happens When Your Skin Burns

In this video, I explain how long you can be exposed to the sun while minimizing your risk for skin damage.

Getting burned after too much time in the sun is more common than it should be. According to a U.S. government survey, over half of respondents younger than 30 years old said they had suffered a sunburn at least once in the past 12 months.9 This rate is about what it was in 2002.

The two most important light wave lengths to your skin health are UVA and UVB light. With overexposure to the sun, your skin first turns pink. The color continues to deepen as the damage to your skin gets worse.

When your skin turns the lightest shade of pink, it means you’ve had enough sun and it’s time to cover up. This can be mere minutes if you’re very light-skinned. Beyond that, you will not improve your vitamin D production.

However, the color changes aren’t fully evident when you’re in the sun. Your skin continues to change color four to six hours after coming inside. For this reason, you should gradually increase your time outside, starting with 10 minutes if you are fair-skinned and potentially 30 minutes if you have a darker complexion.

Your sunburn may exhibit cutaneous redness, swelling and pain, an acute toxic reaction to exposure to the UV rays and not a true thermal burn from the heat of the sun.10 The energy from the UV radiation from the sun damages the skin, and more importantly, the DNA.

The effect of different proteins and enzymes leads to dilation of the blood vessels and the characteristic signs of sunburn. DNA damage can involve destruction of the skin cells, one reason why your skin may peel after a sunburn.

Afterburn Care at Home

Before you reach for a chemical concoction or over-the-counter painkiller to treat your accidental overexposure to the sun, reach for these natural remedies that don’t come with side effect warnings or cautions.11,12,13

White Potatoes

Potatoes are high in starch and low in fiber, which makes eating them a poor choice when you’re watching your carbohydrate intake. However, cutting one open and rubbing on your painful sunburn may help take the sting out of the burn.

Raw Organic Honey or Manuka Honey

It’s been used as a topical skin salve since the time of the Egyptians. Raw, organic and locally sourced honey may also have antibacterial properties to help prevent an infection. Manuka honey, in particular, has well-recognized healing properties.

Avoid the commercial honey sold in grocery stores, as most of it is sugar that may actually worsen your infection. It’s also been found that more than 75 percent of the honey on American supermarket shelves may be ultra-processed — to the point that all inherent medicinal properties are completely gone.

White Vinegar

Good for clearing your drains, deodorants and cleaning your pots, white vinegar may also help cool your burn. Pour one full cup into tepid bathwater and give yourself a good soak.

Green Tea

Healthy to drink and as a compress on your sunburns. Wash your skin gently in the extract and drink two cups of green tea a day to provide additional protection against the sun.14

Strawberries

Like green tea, strawberries have tannin that can help alleviate the sting of a sunburn. Mash a cup of ripened strawberries and apply it to the top of the burn. Let it sit for several minutes and rinse with fresh, tepid water.

Cucumbers

These delicious vegetables are often used to soothe your eyes during a spa treatment. They may also have a cooling effect on your sunburn. Make a paste in a food processor and apply it to your skin. Leave it on for several minutes and rinse off with fresh, tepid water.

Aloe Vera

This easy–to-grow plant may be kept at home to reduce the pain and speed healing from thermal and sun burns.

Loaded with powerful glyconutrients to speed healing, it can be applied up to five times a day topically over the area until your burn improves. It’s best to use the thick gel substance from a mature aloe vera leaf.

Oatmeal

A classic soothing treatment for chicken pox, it also helps soothe your sunburn. Grind a cup to fine texture and add it to your bathwater. You can also wrap dry oatmeal in a cheesecloth.

Run cool water over the cheesecloth, catching the liquid in a bowl. Toss the oatmeal and use the liquid for cool compresses over the sunburned area.

Coriander Oil

Use this essential oil by lightly rubbing over the sunburned area.

Nutrients That Protect Your Skin From the Inside

Having the proper tools on hand to treat an accidental sunburn is good practice, but preventing one is even better. Eating a diet high in specific nutrients may help reduce your potential for sun damage. Several nutrients that have received attention includeastaxanthin, polypodium leucotomos, lycopene and a combination of vitamins C, E and polyphenols.15,16,17,18,19

  • In the carotenoid family, astaxanthin has a protective effect against UV-induced cell death. This powerful antioxidant may also be integral to your eye health, increasing athletic performance and your heart health. Salmon, algae and shellfish naturally contain astaxanthin. This is one of the few supplements I believe everyone would benefit from taking.
  • Polypodium leucotomos aqueous extract of fern from Central America is used to prevent certain skin problems, including sunburn. A strong antioxidant, use before exposure may reduce skin reddening and skin damage.20
  • The nutrient that makes your tomatoes red, lycopene, may also reduce your potential for experiencing sunburn. In one study tracking patients over 10 weeks, researchers found that those who consistently ate tomato paste for 10 weeks were 40 percent less likely to experience sunburn.21
  • In combination, vitamins C, E and polyphenols appear to contribute to internal photoprotection, reducing your potential for sunburn. Honey, fruits, broccoli, cabbage, celery, onion, parsley and tea are rich in polyphenols.

Untangle the SPF Promise

Sunscreen products may give you a false sense of security. Many believe the higher sun protection factor (SPF) number gives greater protection against UVA or UVB light. The first challenge is most products protect against UVB light, responsible for vitamin D production, but not UVA light that tends to be most responsible for DNA damage and skin cancers.

UVB radiation is responsible for causing your skin to tan and burn. Because you don’t burn as easily wearing sunscreen, you may be tempted to prolong the time you sit under the harsh rays of the sun, increasing your risk of skin damage from UVA light, which can penetrate deeper.

A product with an SPF of 30 will theoretically filter 97 percent of the UVB rays for two hours. Hypothetically, a higher SPF would block more of the sun’s UVB rays, but no sunscreen will block 100 percent. And remember that the SPF has little to do with the ability of the product to filter UVA light. If the product protects against UVB but not UVA, there is a higher likelihood you will be protected against burning but not against other forms of sun damage.

Sunscreens with a higher SPF also require more chemicals to achieve the intended result. Many could pose a health risk when they are absorbed through the skin, potentially causing tissue damage and/or disrupting your hormonal balance. Because you don’t experience better protection with higher SPF numbers, it’s best to stick with SPF 30 if you choose to use sunscreen.

Protect Yourself From Skin Damage

Using a nutrient-rich diet may reduce your potential for sunburn but will not protect you during long periods in the sun or if you are at higher risk for a sunburn. In these situations, you need to add another layer of protection for your skin. Clothing is one of the safest and most effective strategies.

I recommend you protect your face and eyes by wearing a wide-brimmed hat or cap. The skin around your eyes is thinner than on other parts of your body and more at risk for cosmetic damage and premature wrinkling. If you plan on being outside for any length of time, bring a long-sleeved shirt or cover-up, and sit in the shade as often as possible.

I recommend you limit your initial exposure to the sun and slowly increase your time. If you are a light-skinned individual who tends to burn easily, limit your initial exposure to a few minutes, especially in the middle of summer. The more tanned your skin, the longer you can stay in the sun. Moisturize your skin with coconut oil. It has both natural UV protection and metabolic benefits.

When making a choice about your sunscreen, consider the chemicals used to manufacture the products. Your safest and most effective choice for sunscreen protection is zinc oxide, as it blocks both UVA and UVB light.22 Avoid nano versions however, to circumvent potential toxicity. In a previous article titled “Sunscreens: The Ugly Truth” is a list of some of the best and worst products on the market today.

Physicists have developed an ultra-fast laser that could drastically speed up our internet


This semiconductor nano-laser can produce up to one trillion laser pulses per second, making it the fastest laser ever at transmitting information.

The record-breaking lasers were created by physicists from Imperial College London in the UK and the Friedrich Schiller University Jena in Germany, using tiny wires made of zinc oxide placed on a silver surface.

“While the fastest lasers typically need several nanoseconds for one cycle our semiconductor nano-laser only needs less than a picosecond and is therefore a thousand times faster,“ said Carsten Ronning, one of the researchers involved from the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, in a press release.

This breakthrough could lead to faster internet connections and data transfer, and is published in Nature Physics.

“Turning a laser on and off quicker means more information carrying 1s and 0s per second, allowing much faster data communications. In fact, these lasers are so much faster than conventional electronics that we had to develop an optical switching method to measure their speed,” said lead author of the research Themis Sidiropoulos from the Imperial College London.

Traditionally in these types of semiconductor lasers, the nanowires are placed on a glass surface – but by using the silver surface they were able to speed up the light by “squeezing it”.

The zinc oxide nanowires are only 120 nanometres in diameter – around a thousandth of the diameter of a strand of human hair – and can already pulse out light at an impressive rate.

But by using features on silver called surface plasmons, which are wave-like motions of excited electrons found at the surface of metals, the physicists could squeeze the light into a much smaller space inside the laser, which meant that it also interacted more strongly with the zinc oxide nanowires.

This stronger interaction sped up the rate at which the lasers could be turned on and off by 10 times, and makes them the fastest on record.

“Most likely we also achieved the maximum possible speed, at which such a semiconductor laser can be operated,” said Robert Röder, a PhD student involved in the project in a press release.

The laser is also stable at room temperature, which makes it perfect for use in internet and communication systems. It could also be used to help detect single molecules or microbes in medical diagnostics.

“This work is so exciting because we are engineering the interaction of light and matter to drive light generation in materials much faster than it occurs naturally,” said senior author and Imperial College London researcher Rupert Oulton in a press release. “When we first started working on this, I would have been happy to speed up switching speeds to a picosecond, which is one trillionth of a second. But we’ve managed to go even faster, to the point where the properties of the material itself set a speed limit.”

Playing Pop and Rock Music Boosts Performance of Solar Cells.


Playing pop and rock music improves the performance of solar cells, according to new research from scientists at Queen Mary University of London and Imperial College London.

The high frequencies and pitch found in pop and rock music cause vibrations that enhanced energy generation in solar cells containing a cluster of ‘nanorods’, leading to a 40 per cent increase in efficiency of the solar cells.

The study has implications for improving energy generation from sunlight, particularly for the development of new, lower cost, printed solar cells.

The researchers grew billions of tiny rods (nanorods) made from zinc oxide, then covered them with an active polymer to form a device that converts sunlight into electricity.

Using the special properties of the zinc oxide material, the team was able to show that sound levels as low as 75 decibels (equivalent to a typical roadside noise or a printer in an office) could significantly improve the solar cell performance.

“After investigating systems for converting vibrations into electricity this is a really exciting development that shows a similar set of physical properties can also enhance the performance of a photovoltaic,” said Dr Steve Dunn, Reader in Nanoscale Materials from Queen Mary’s School of Engineering and Materials Science and co-author of the paper.

Scientists had previously shown that applying pressure or strain to zinc oxide materials could result in voltage outputs, known as the piezoelectric effect. However, the effect of these piezoelectric voltages on solar cell efficiency had not received significant attention before.

“We thought the soundwaves, which produce random fluctuations, would cancel each other out and so didn’t expect to see any significant overall effect on the power output,” said James Durrant, Professor of Photochemistry at Imperial College London, who co-led the study.

“We tried playing music instead of dull flat sounds, as this helped us explore the effect of different pitches. The biggest difference we found was when we played pop music rather than classical, which we now realise is because our acoustic solar cells respond best to the higher pitched sounds present in pop music,” he concluded.

The discovery could be used to power devices that are exposed to acoustic vibrations, such as air conditioning units or within cars and other vehicles.

Co-author Dr Joe Briscoe also from Queen Mary’s School of Engineering and Materials Science, commented: “The whole device extremely simple and inexpensive to produce as the zinc oxide was grown using a simple, chemical solution technique and the polymer was also deposited from a solution.”

Dr Dunn added: “The work highlights the benefits of collaboration to develop new and interesting systems and scientific understanding.”

Big beats bolster solar cell efficiency.


Playing pop and rock music improves the performance of solar cells, according to new research from scientists at Queen Mary University of London and Imperial College London.

The high frequencies and pitch found in pop and rock music cause vibrations that enhanced in  containing a cluster of ‘nanorods‘, leading to a 40 per cent increase in efficiency of the solar cells.

Big beats bolster solar cell efficiency

The study has implications for improving energy generation from sunlight, particularly for the development of new, lower cost, printed solar cells.

The researchers grew billions of tiny rods (nanorods) made from zinc oxide, then covered them with an active polymer to form a device that converts sunlight into electricity.

Using the special properties of the zinc oxide material, the team was able to show that sound levels as low as 75 decibels (equivalent to a typical roadside noise or a printer in an office) could significantly improve the solar cell performance.

“After investigating systems for converting vibrations into electricity this is a really exciting development that shows a similar set of physical properties can also enhance the performance of a photovoltaic,” said Dr Steve Dunn, Reader in Nanoscale Materials from Queen Mary’s School of Engineering and Materials Science.

Scientists had previously shown that applying pressure or strain to  materials could result in voltage outputs, known as the piezoelectric effect. However, the effect of these piezoelectric voltages on  had not received significant attention before.

“We thought the soundwaves, which produce random fluctuations, would cancel each other out and so didn’t expect to see any significant overall effect on the power output,” said James Durrant, Professor of Photochemistry at Imperial College London, who co-led the study.

“The key for us was that not only that the  from the sound didn’t cancel each other out, but also that some frequencies of sound seemed really to amplify the solar cell output – so that the increase in power was a remarkably big effect considering how little sound energy we put in.”

“We tried playing music instead of dull flat sounds, as this helped us explore the effect of different pitches. The biggest difference we found was when we played pop music rather than classical, which we now realise is because our acoustic solar cells respond best to the higher pitched sounds present in pop music,” he concluded.

The discovery could be used to power devices that are exposed to acoustic vibrations, such as air conditioning units or within cars and other vehicles.

Dr Dunn added: “The work highlights the benefits of collaboration to develop new and interesting systems and scientific understanding.”