Hongbo Suo , Xinzheng Liu , Shu Chen , Qi Li , Xiangnan Liu , Lili Xu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Biodiesel is more environmentally friendly compared to traditional petroleum diesel. The method of producing biodiesel catalyzed by lipases, as a green chemistry technology, can further reduce its negative impact on the environment. In this work, lipase immobilized on magnetic cellulose was embedded in Cu(PABA), and then the biocomposite (MCL@Cu(PABA)) was used for biodiesel production. The good biocompatibility and flexible skeleton structure of cellulose can buffer the compression effect on enzyme molecules during the formation of Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs), and the MOFs protective layer can reduce the damage caused by denaturants to enzyme molecules. The biocatalyst showed enhanced activity and stability with a lower deactivation constant (Kd). Under the optimized reaction conditions, the biodiesel yield can reach 78.4 %. After reused for 7 times, the biocatalyst can still achieve a biodiesel yield of 58.8 %. Moreover, after stored for 30 days, the biodiesel yield can still reach 70.3 %. For all experimental yields, the standard deviation (SD) ranged from 2.4 % to 4.5 %. Secondary structure analysis showed that the rigid structure and active conformation of lipase was enhanced after Cu(PABA) encapsulation.
期刊介绍:
Process Biochemistry is an application-orientated research journal devoted to reporting advances with originality and novelty, in the science and technology of the processes involving bioactive molecules and living organisms. These processes concern the production of useful metabolites or materials, or the removal of toxic compounds using tools and methods of current biology and engineering. Its main areas of interest include novel bioprocesses and enabling technologies (such as nanobiotechnology, tissue engineering, directed evolution, metabolic engineering, systems biology, and synthetic biology) applicable in food (nutraceutical), healthcare (medical, pharmaceutical, cosmetic), energy (biofuels), environmental, and biorefinery industries and their underlying biological and engineering principles.