Photosynthesis in Higher Plants Class 11 Notes | CBSE Biology Chapter 11

Photosynthesis in Higher Plants is Chapter 11 of CBSE Class 11 Biology — the chapter that explains how green plants trap sunlight and turn it into the food that powers almost all life on Earth. It connects physics (light), chemistry (redox reactions), and biology (cell organelles) into one elegant story that runs inside the chloroplast.

By the end of these notes you will be able to locate the site of photosynthesis, name the pigments, walk through the light reaction and the two photosystems, explain cyclic and non-cyclic photophosphorylation, state the chemiosmotic hypothesis for ATP synthesis, trace the Calvin cycle, compare C3 with C4 plants, explain photorespiration, and list the factors affecting the rate of photosynthesis. This is a high-weightage NEET chapter and a reliable source of board questions worth roughly 5–7 marks.


Table of Contents


Key Concepts

1. What is Photosynthesis?

Photosynthesis is the anabolic (building-up) process by which green plants, algae, and some bacteria synthesise organic food (glucose) from carbon dioxide and water using light energy, releasing oxygen as a by-product.

The overall balanced equation is:

6CO₂ + 12H₂O → (light, chlorophyll) → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ + 6H₂O

  • Water is both a reactant and a product; the O₂ released comes from water, not CO₂ (proven by Ruben and Kamen using the isotope ¹⁸O).
  • It is the only major process that converts solar energy into chemical energy stored in food.

2. Site of Photosynthesis — The Chloroplast

Photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplast, a double-membrane organelle found mainly in mesophyll cells of the leaf.

[DIAGRAM: A chloroplast — outer and inner membrane, stroma (fluid matrix), and grana (stacks of disc-shaped thylakoids) connected by stroma lamellae.]

  • Grana (thylakoids): site of the light reaction — they contain chlorophyll and trap light.
  • Stroma: site of the dark reaction (Calvin cycle) — the enzymatic, light-independent carbon fixation.

Key idea: The membrane (thylakoid) handles light capture and ATP/NADPH formation; the stroma handles sugar synthesis.


3. Photosynthetic Pigments

Pigments are substances that absorb light. Leaf pigments can be separated by paper chromatography into four groups.

PigmentColourRole
Chlorophyll aBright/blue-greenChief pigment; the reaction-centre that drives photochemistry
Chlorophyll bYellow-greenAccessory pigment; passes energy to chlorophyll a
XanthophyllsYellowAccessory pigment
CarotenoidsYellow to orangeAccessory; also protect chlorophyll from photo-oxidation

Chlorophyll a absorbs maximally in the blue (around 430 nm) and red (around 660 nm) regions. The action spectrum of photosynthesis closely matches the absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a, proving it is the main pigment.


4. The Two Stages of Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis has two phases that occur in sequence.

  • Light reaction (photochemical phase): light-dependent; occurs in the thylakoid membrane; produces ATP, NADPH, and O₂.
  • Dark reaction (biosynthetic phase): light-independent; occurs in the stroma; uses ATP and NADPH to fix CO₂ into sugar.

5. The Light Reaction and Photosystems

Pigments are organised into two light-harvesting complexes called photosystems, named in the order they were discovered.

  • Photosystem I (PS I): reaction-centre chlorophyll a absorbs at 700 nm (P700).
  • Photosystem II (PS II): reaction-centre chlorophyll a absorbs at 680 nm (P680).

Each photosystem has a central reaction centre surrounded by a light-harvesting complex (LHC) of hundreds of accessory pigment molecules that funnel absorbed energy to the reaction centre.


6. Electron Transport — Non-Cyclic Photophosphorylation

In non-cyclic flow, electrons travel in a one-way path through both photosystems — drawn as the famous Z-scheme.

[DIAGRAM: Z-scheme — PS II (P680) → electron acceptor → plastoquinone → cytochrome b6-f → plastocyanin → PS I (P700) → ferredoxin → NADP⁺ reductase → NADPH.]

  • PS II absorbs light, P680 emits an excited electron passed down the electron transport chain.
  • The lost electron is replaced by the photolysis (splitting) of water, which releases O₂ and protons: 2H₂O → 4H⁺ + O₂ + 4e⁻.
  • Electrons reach PS I, are re-energised, and finally reduce NADP⁺ to NADPH.
  • Both ATP and NADPH are formed; this is called non-cyclic photophosphorylation.

Note: Photolysis of water is associated with PS II and occurs on the inner side of the thylakoid membrane.


7. Cyclic Photophosphorylation

When only PS I is functional (light beyond 680 nm, or when NADP⁺ is unavailable), electrons cycle back to P700 instead of going to NADP⁺.

  • Only ATP is synthesised — no NADPH and no O₂.
  • It occurs in the stroma lamellae, which lack PS II and NADP reductase.
  • It helps balance the ATP : NADPH ratio needed by the Calvin cycle.

8. Chemiosmotic Hypothesis & ATP Synthesis

The chemiosmotic hypothesis (Peter Mitchell) explains how ATP is actually made — by a proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane.

  • Splitting of water inside the lumen, and proton pumping by the electron transport chain, build a high H⁺ concentration in the thylakoid lumen.
  • This proton gradient (high inside, low in stroma) stores potential energy.
  • Protons flow back to the stroma through the F₀–F₁ ATP synthase (CF₀ channel), and this flow drives the synthesis of ATP from ADP + iP.

Key idea: ATP formation needs a membrane, a proton pump, a proton gradient, and ATP synthase — exactly the chemiosmotic requirements.


9. Biosynthetic Phase — The Calvin Cycle (C3 Pathway)

The dark reaction uses ATP and NADPH from the light reaction to fix CO₂ into sugar in the stroma. It was traced by Melvin Calvin, hence the Calvin cycle. The first stable product is a 3-carbon acid (3-PGA), so it is the C3 pathway.

The cycle has three stages:

  • Carboxylation: CO₂ combines with the 5-carbon acceptor RuBP, catalysed by the enzyme RuBisCO, forming two molecules of 3-PGA.
  • Reduction: 3-PGA is converted to G3P (sugar) using 2 ATP and 2 NADPH per CO₂ fixed.
  • Regeneration: RuBP is regenerated using ATP so the cycle can continue.

To make one glucose, the cycle turns 6 times, using 18 ATP and 12 NADPH and fixing 6 CO₂.


10. C4 Pathway (Hatch and Slack Pathway)

C4 plants (maize, sugarcane, sorghum) have a special leaf anatomy and fix CO₂ twice to avoid photorespiration.

  • Kranz anatomy: large bundle-sheath cells with many chloroplasts surround the vascular bundles.
  • The first stable product is a 4-carbon acid (oxaloacetic acid, OAA) formed in mesophyll cells; the primary acceptor is PEP and the enzyme is PEP carboxylase.
  • The C4 acid moves to bundle-sheath cells, releases CO₂ for the Calvin cycle there, raising CO₂ around RuBisCO.

Advantage: C4 plants show no photorespiration, higher productivity, and tolerate higher temperatures and lower CO₂ better than C3 plants.


11. Photorespiration

Photorespiration is a wasteful process in C3 plants where RuBisCO fixes O₂ instead of CO₂ when O₂ concentration is high.

  • RuBisCO has a dual nature — it can act as a carboxylase or an oxygenase; high O₂ favours oxygenation.
  • It produces one molecule of phosphoglycolate (2-C) and leads to release of CO₂.
  • There is no synthesis of sugar, ATP, or NADPH — it lowers the net yield of C3 plants.

Note: C4 plants avoid photorespiration because their bundle-sheath cells keep CO₂ high around RuBisCO.


12. Factors Affecting Photosynthesis

The rate of photosynthesis depends on internal factors (chlorophyll, leaf area) and external factors (light, CO₂, temperature, water).

Blackman’s Law of Limiting Factors

Blackman’s law (1905): when a process is governed by several factors, the rate is limited by the factor that is in shortest supply (the limiting factor). Changing only the limiting factor will change the rate.

FactorEffect on Photosynthesis
LightRate rises with intensity, then plateaus; very high light causes photo-oxidation (breakdown)
CO₂ concentrationMajor limiting factor; raising CO₂ increases rate up to a saturation point
TemperatureDark reaction is enzyme-controlled; C4 plants have a higher optimum than C3
WaterStress closes stomata, reduces CO₂ intake and leaf area

Weightage in Board & Entrance Exams

ExamTypical WeightageMost-Tested Areas
CBSE Board (Class 11)5–7 marksLight vs dark reaction, Calvin cycle, C3 vs C4, photorespiration
NEET2–4 questions (high yield)Photosystems, Z-scheme, photophosphorylation, RuBisCO, C4 anatomy
CUET / State Boards2–3 questionsPigments, site of photosynthesis, limiting factors

[TABLE: Question-type split — VSA (1 mark): pigments, P700/P680, first product; SA (2–3 marks): cyclic vs non-cyclic, C3 vs C4, photorespiration; LA (5 marks): Calvin cycle, chemiosmotic ATP synthesis.]


Important Definitions

TermDefinition
PhotosynthesisSynthesis of food from CO₂ and water using light energy, releasing O₂
PhotolysisLight-driven splitting of water in PS II releasing O₂, H⁺, and electrons
PhotosystemLight-harvesting complex with a reaction centre (PS I = P700, PS II = P680)
Non-cyclic photophosphorylationOne-way electron flow through PS II and PS I making ATP + NADPH + O₂
Cyclic photophosphorylationElectron flow only in PS I making ATP alone (no NADPH, no O₂)
ChemiosmosisATP synthesis driven by a proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane
Calvin cycle (C3)Dark-reaction pathway fixing CO₂ via RuBP; first product is 3-PGA
RuBisCOEnzyme of carboxylation; acts as both carboxylase and oxygenase
Kranz anatomySpecial leaf structure of C4 plants with bundle-sheath cells
PhotorespirationWasteful O₂ fixation by RuBisCO in C3 plants; no ATP/NADPH/sugar made

Solved Examples

Example 1

How many ATP and NADPH molecules are needed to make one glucose molecule in the Calvin cycle?

Answer: The cycle turns 6 times for one glucose. Per CO₂: 3 ATP + 2 NADPH. So total = 18 ATP and 12 NADPH.

Example 2

Name the first stable products of the C3 and C4 pathways and the number of carbons in each.

Answer: C3 — 3-PGA (3 carbons); C4 — oxaloacetic acid, OAA (4 carbons).

Example 3

Which products of the light reaction are used in the dark reaction, and which is released into the air?

Answer: ATP and NADPH are used in the Calvin cycle; O₂ is released into the atmosphere.

Example 4

Why is non-cyclic photophosphorylation called “non-cyclic”?

Answer: Electrons travel a one-way path from water through PS II and PS I to NADP⁺ and do not return to their source — hence non-cyclic. The lost electrons are replaced by photolysis of water.

Example 5

A C3 and a C4 plant are kept in identical bright light, high temperature, and low CO₂. Which fixes carbon more efficiently and why?

Answer: The C4 plant, because Kranz anatomy concentrates CO₂ around RuBisCO in bundle-sheath cells, preventing photorespiration even at high temperature and low CO₂.

Example 6

In an experiment, light intensity is increased but the photosynthesis rate stops rising. According to Blackman’s law, what is happening?

Answer: Light is no longer the limiting factor; another factor (usually CO₂ concentration) has become the limiting factor, so increasing light alone cannot raise the rate.


Important Questions for Board Exams

1-Mark Questions (VSA)

  1. Name the pigment that forms the reaction centre of PS I.
  2. From which molecule is the oxygen released during photosynthesis derived?
  3. What is the primary CO₂ acceptor in the C4 pathway?
  4. Name the enzyme responsible for photorespiration.
  5. In which part of the chloroplast does the Calvin cycle occur?

2–3-Mark Questions (SA)

  1. Differentiate between cyclic and non-cyclic photophosphorylation.
  2. Compare C3 and C4 plants with respect to first product, CO₂ acceptor, and photorespiration.
  3. Explain why RuBisCO is described as having a dual nature.
  4. State Blackman’s law of limiting factors with one example.

5-Mark Questions (LA)

  1. Describe the three stages of the Calvin cycle and state how many ATP and NADPH are needed per glucose.
  2. Explain the chemiosmotic hypothesis of ATP synthesis in the chloroplast.
  3. Draw and explain the Z-scheme of non-cyclic electron transport, naming the products formed.

Quick Revision Points

  • Overall: 6CO₂ + 12H₂O → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ + 6H₂O; O₂ comes from water
  • Site: chloroplast — grana (light reaction), stroma (dark reaction)
  • Pigments: chlorophyll a (chief), chlorophyll b, xanthophylls, carotenoids
  • PS I = P700, PS II = P680; LHC funnels energy to the reaction centre
  • Non-cyclic: PS II + PS I → ATP + NADPH + O₂ (Z-scheme; water split in PS II)
  • Cyclic: only PS I → ATP alone; occurs in stroma lamellae
  • Chemiosmosis: H⁺ gradient in thylakoid lumen drives ATP synthase
  • Calvin cycle (C3): RuBP + CO₂ → 2 × 3-PGA via RuBisCO; 18 ATP + 12 NADPH per glucose
  • C4: Kranz anatomy; first product OAA (4-C); PEP carboxylase; no photorespiration
  • Photorespiration: RuBisCO fixes O₂; no sugar/ATP/NADPH; only in C3
  • Blackman’s law: rate set by the factor in shortest supply (often CO₂)

Next Chapter: Chapter 12 — Respiration in Plants

Studying this chapter? Track it — saved on this device, no login.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top