17 research outputs found

    Wiring of Photosystem II to Hydrogenase for Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting.

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    In natural photosynthesis, light is used for the production of chemical energy carriers to fuel biological activity. The re-engineering of natural photosynthetic pathways can provide inspiration for sustainable fuel production and insights for understanding the process itself. Here, we employ a semiartificial approach to study photobiological water splitting via a pathway unavailable to nature: the direct coupling of the water oxidation enzyme, photosystem II, to the H2 evolving enzyme, hydrogenase. Essential to this approach is the integration of the isolated enzymes into the artificial circuit of a photoelectrochemical cell. We therefore developed a tailor-made hierarchically structured indium-tin oxide electrode that gives rise to the excellent integration of both photosystem II and hydrogenase for performing the anodic and cathodic half-reactions, respectively. When connected together with the aid of an applied bias, the semiartificial cell demonstrated quantitative electron flow from photosystem II to the hydrogenase with the production of H2 and O2 being in the expected two-to-one ratio and a light-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency of 5.4% under low-intensity red-light irradiation. We thereby demonstrate efficient light-driven water splitting using a pathway inaccessible to biology and report on a widely applicable in vitro platform for the controlled coupling of enzymatic redox processes to meaningfully study photocatalytic reactions.This work was supported by the U.K. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/H00338X/2 to E.R. and EP/G037221/1, nanoDTC, to D.M.), the UK Biology and Biotechnological Sciences Research Council (BB/K002627/1 to A.W.R. and BB/K010220/1 to E.R.), a Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship (PIEF-GA-2013-625034 to C.Y.L), a Marie Curie International Incoming Fellowship (PIIF-GA-2012-328085 RPSII to J.J.Z) and the CEA and the CNRS (to J.C.F.C.). A.W.R. holds a Wolfson Merit Award from the Royal Society.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from ACS Publications via http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b0373

    Enhanced oxygen-tolerance of the full heterotrimeric membrane-bound [NiFe]-hydrogenase of ralstonia eutropha.

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    Hydrogenases are oxygen-sensitive enzymes that catalyze the conversion between protons and hydrogen. Water-soluble subcomplexes of membrane-bound [NiFe]-hydrogenases (MBH) have been extensively studied for applications in hydrogen-oxygen fuel cells as they are relatively tolerant to oxygen, although even these catalysts are still inactivated in oxidative conditions. Here, the full heterotrimeric MBH of Ralstonia eutropha, including the membrane-integral cytochrome b subunit, was investigated electrochemically using electrodes modified with planar tethered bilayer lipid membranes (tBLM). Cyclic voltammetry and chronoamperometry experiments show that MBH, in equilibrium with the quinone pool in the tBLM, does not anaerobically inactivate under oxidative redox conditions. In aerobic environments, the MBH is reversibly inactivated by O2, but reactivation was found to be fast even under oxidative redox conditions. This enhanced resistance to inactivation is ascribed to the oligomeric state of MBH in the lipid membrane

    Design of a H2/O2 biofuel cell based on thermostable enzymes

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    A new generation of mediatorless H2/O2 biofuel cells was designed based on a hyperthermophilic O2-tolerant hydrogenase and a thermostable bilirubin oxidase both immobilized on carbon nanofibers. A power density up to 1.5±0.2 mW*cm−2 at 60 °Cwas reached. This first demonstration of a H2/O2 biofuel cell able to deliver electricity over awide range of temperatures, from30 °C up to 80 °C, and over a large pHwindow, allows considering this device as an alternative power supply for small portable applications in various environments, including extreme ones

    Impact of substrate diffusion and enzyme distribution in 3D-porous electrodes: A combined electrochemical and modelling study of a thermostable H2/O2 enzymatic fuel cell

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    Using redox enzymes as biocatalysts in fuel cells is an attractive strategy for sustainable energy production. Once hydrogenase for H 2 oxidation and bilirubin oxidase (BOD) for O 2 reduction have been wired on electrodes, the enzymatic fuel cell (EFC) thus built is expected to provide sufficient energy to power small electronic devices, while overcoming the issues associated with scarcity, price and inhibition of platinum based catalysts. Despite recent improvements, these biodevices suffer from moderate power output and low stability. In this work, we demonstrate how substrate diffusion and enzyme distribution in the bioelectrodes control EFC performance. A new EFC was built by immobilizing two thermostable enzymes in hierarchical carbon felt modified by carbon nanotubes. This device displayed very high power and stability, producing 15.8 mW h of energy after 17 h of continuous operation. Despite the large available electrode porosity, mass transfer was shown to limit the performance. To determine the optimal geometry of the EFC, a numerical model was established, based on a finite element method (FEM). This model allowed an optimal electrode thickness of less than 100 μm to be determined, with a porosity of 60%. Thanks to very efficient enzyme wiring and high enzyme loading, non-catalytic signals for both enzymes were detected and quantified, enabling the electroactive enzyme distribution in the porous electrode to be fully determined for the first time. High total turnover numbers, approaching 10 7 for BOD and 10 8 for hydrogenase, were found, as was an impressive massic activity of 1 A mg -1 with respect to the mass of the electroactive enzyme molecules. This strategy, relying on stable enzymes and mesoporous materials, and the model set up may constitute the basis for a larger panel of bioelectrodes and EFCs

    Carbon-nanotube-supported Bio-inspired Nickel catalyst and its integration in hybrid Hydrogen/Air fuel cells

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    A biomimetic nickel bis-diphosphine complex incorporating the amino acid arginine in the outer coordination sphere was immobilized on modified carbon nanotubes (CNTs) through electrostatic interactions. The functionalized redox nanomaterial exhibits reversible electrocatalytic activity for the H2/2 H+ interconversion from pH 0 to 9, with catalytic preference for H2 oxidation at all pH values. The high activity of the complex over a wide pH range allows us to integrate this bio-inspired nanomaterial either in an enzymatic fuel cell together with a multicopper oxidase at the cathode, or in a proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) using Pt/C at the cathode. The Ni-based PEMFC reaches 14 mW cm−2, only six-times-less as compared to full-Pt conventional PEMFC. The Pt-free enzyme-based fuel cell delivers ≈2 mW cm−2, a new efficiency record for a hydrogen biofuel cell with base metal catalysts.by Solene Gentil, Noemie Lalaoui, Arnab Dutta, Yannig Nedellec, Serge Cosnier, Wendy J. Shaw, Vincent Artero and Alan Le Goff
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