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3D-Printed interfacial devices for biocatalytic CO2 conversion at gas-liquid interface

Authors
Kim, Han SolHong, Sung-GilYang, JusangJu, YoungjunOk, JoongbokKwon, Seok-JoonYeon, Kyung-MinDordick, Jonathan S.Kim, Jungbae
Issue Date
May-2020
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Keywords
CO2 conversion and utilization; Carbonic anhydrase; Interfacial biocatalysis; Enzyme immobilization; 3D printing
Citation
JOURNAL OF CO2 UTILIZATION, v.38, pp.291 - 298
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CO2 UTILIZATION
Volume
38
Start Page
291
End Page
298
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/56068
DOI
10.1016/j.jcou.2020.02.005
ISSN
2212-9820
Abstract
Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) are enzymes that can function at physiologic interfaces and catalyze the interfacial conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) into bicarbonate (HCO3-) with an extraordinarily high catalytic efficiency. Even though CAs have potential to be used for CO(2 )sequestration, significant mass transfer resistance and poor enzyme stability at gas-liquid interface often limit the effectiveness of the enzyme. Here, we report a density-adjustable 3D-printed platform, which can accommodate electrospun polymer fibers with immobilized CA and enable the positioning of immobilized CA in an air-water biphasic system. By using 3D printing, we fabricate interfacial devices consisting of two floating units and different number of biocatalytic units. Two mesh structures of each biocatalytic unit are used to sandwich immobilized CA while two floating units, connected on either side of the biocatalytic units, have an internal hollow volume that enables controlling the position of the enzyme-loaded interfacial device at or near the air-water interface. The positioning of interfacial device directly at the biphasic interface accelerated CO(2 )conversion by 1.8- and 3.4-fold when compared to reactions performed with immobilized CA within the aqueous solution and a control interfacial device without immobilized CA, respectively. The CA-loaded interfacial device retained 99.3 % and 88.2 % of its initial CO2 conversion rate after ten recycles and after subsequent storage in an aqueous buffer at 4 degrees C for 459 days, respectively. Facile combination of interfacial devices and immobilized enzymes on polymer fibers has paved the way to practical uses of biocatalysts for interfacial CO2 sequestration.
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