Photoinduced charge separation

Photoinduced charge separation is the process of an electron in an atom being excited to a higher energy level and then leaving the atom to a nearby electron acceptor.

Rutherford model
An atom consists of a positively charged nucleus orbitted by electrons. The nucleus consists of uncharged neutrons and positively charged protons. Electrons are negative charged. In the early part of the twentieth century Ernest Rutherford suggested that the electrons orbitted the dense central nucleus in a manner analogous to planets orbiting the sun. The centripetal force required to keep the electrons in orbit was provided by the Coulomb force of the protons in the nucleus acting upon the electrons; just like the gravitational force of the sun acting on a planet provides the centripetal force necessary to keep the planet in orbit.

This model, although appealing, doesn't hold true in the real world. Synchrotron radiation would cause the orbiting electron to lose orbital energy and spiral inward since the vector quantity of acceleration of the particle multiplied by its mass (the value of the force required to keep the electron in circular motion) would be less than the electrical force the proton applied to the electron.

Once the electron spiralled into the nucleus the electron would combine with a proton to form a neutron, and the atom would cease to exist. This model is clearly wrong.

Bohr model
In 1913 Niels Bohr refined the rutherford model by stating that the electrons existed in discrete quantized states called energy levels. This meant that the electrons could only occupy orbits at certain energies. The laws of quantum physics apply here, and they don't comply with the laws of classical newtonian mechanics.

An electron which is completely free from the atom has an energy of 0 joules (or 0 electronvolts). An electron which is described as being at the 'ground state' has an energy which is equal to the ionisation energy of the atom. The electron will reside in this energy level under normal circumstances.

If a photon of light hits the atom it will be absorbed if, and only if, energy of that photon is equal to the difference between the ground state and another energy level in that atom. This raises the electron to a higher energy level.