Confining the motion of enzymes in nanofiltration membrane for efficient and stable removal of micropollutants

Hao Zhang, Jianquan Luo*, John M. Woodley, Yinhua Wan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Enzymes in living cells are highly dynamic but at the same time regularly confined for achieving efficient metabolism. Inspired by this phenomenon, we have prepared a novel biocatalytic membrane with high enzyme activity and stability by tuning the confinement strength of the membrane to enzyme, which was achieved via modifying the support layer of a polymeric nanofiltration (NF) membrane and reversely filtrating enzyme. A mussel-inspired coating was used to modify the support interior of the NF membrane to enhance charge and steric effects on enzyme, thus stabilizing enzyme in the membrane with little increment in mass transfer resistance for substrate and products (only 20% permeability loss with a high enzyme loading of 1.34 mg/cm2). A suitable confinement strength of the membrane to enzyme could delay the enzyme leakage and endow enzyme with certain mobility for efficient reaction. Thus, the obtained biocatalytic membrane exhibited a negligible decline in BPA removal efficiency for 7 reuse cycles (
Original languageEnglish
Article number127870
JournalChemical Engineering Journal
Volume421
Issue numberPart 2
Number of pages12
ISSN1385-8947
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Micropollutants
  • Biocatalytic membrane
  • Enzyme mobility
  • Enzyme immobilization
  • Confinement strength

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