by Sophie Jenkins
London, UK (SPX) Jan 13, 2026
Physicists at Trinity College Dublin have developed a new theoretical framework that connects photon condensation in optical microstructures with the fundamental limits of heat engines, potentially offering new routes to harvest more useful energy from sunlight and other light sources. The work suggests that devices which trap light in tiny cavities could concentrate diffuse radiation into laser-like beams without requiring an incoming laser, opening a path to turn disorganised heat into ordered optical work.
In their analysis, the team considered photons confined within microscopic optical devices, where the particles of light can behave collectively rather than as independent quanta. Under the right conditions this collective behaviour leads to a form of condensation, in which light energy is funneled into a small, intense beam of a single pure colour that closely resembles laser output.
Previous experiments had demonstrated such photon condensation, but only when the input energy already arrived in a highly concentrated, coherent form provided by a laser. The new theory indicates that similar condensation should be achievable when the input is diffuse, such as the broad spectrum radiation from sunlight, conventional lamps, or LEDs, provided that the optical cavity and its environment are engineered appropriately.
Senior author Paul Eastham, Naughton Associate Professor in Trinity’s School of Physics, explains that the behaviour of these light-trapping devices can be understood using the same thermodynamic principles that govern classical heat engines. By treating the trapped photons and their environment as a heat engine, the researchers show that the onset of photon condensation is controlled by the laws that also limit the performance of steam engines and power plants, linking optical condensation thresholds to fundamental constraints on converting heat into work.
This conceptual bridge means that design rules for efficient heat engines can inform the design of optical structures that channel light energy at the quantum level. According to the researchers, such insight could guide the development of micro- and nano-scale devices that steer energy flow in photonic circuits, solar energy technologies, and microscopic engines powered directly by radiation instead of mechanical fuel.
First author Luisa Toledo Tude, also from Trinity’s School of Physics, notes that the primary aim of these optical devices is to transform incoming radiation into a more useful form of energy output. In the scenarios considered, that useful output appears as laser-like light that can be converted relatively easily into electricity, mechanical motion, or other forms of work depending on the application.
One potential application highlighted by the team is the integration of photon-condensation cavities with conventional solar cells. In such a hybrid system, a device that concentrates diffuse sunlight into a narrow-band, high-intensity beam could feed a photovoltaic element more effectively than direct illumination, increasing the fraction of incident solar energy captured as electrical power.
Beyond photovoltaics, the same principles could enable miniature radiation-driven engines where ordered optical fields drive mechanical or electronic processes on microscopic scales. These devices might harvest ambient light from indoor sources such as lamps and LEDs, repurposing it to perform useful work in low-power sensor networks or quantum technologies.
The research, supported by funding from Research Ireland, appears in the journal Physical Review A. The authors emphasise that the present work is theoretical and that the next step is to test the predictions experimentally in the laboratory, where real optical materials, cavity imperfections, and environmental noise will determine how closely practical devices can approach the idealised behaviour described in their models.
Although the scientists caution against over-speculation, they recognise that validating this theory could broaden the toolbox for managing light as an energy resource. In the longer term, advances in controlling photon condensation using heat-engine concepts may contribute to technologies that extract more useful work from sunlight and artificial illumination, helping to power the vast number of devices and processes that depend on reliable energy flows.
Research Report:Photon condensation from thermal sources and the limits of heat engines
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