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Does the Abiotic Formation of Oligopeptides on TiO2 Nanoparticles Require Special Catalytic Sites? Apparently Not

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Version 3 2019-02-23, 21:31
Version 2 2018-08-03, 23:19
Version 1 2018-08-03, 23:07
journal contribution
posted on 2019-02-23, 21:31 authored by Marco Fabbiani, gloria tabacchigloria tabacchi, Ettore Fois, Gianmario Martra
Preprint version of the paper:
Does the Abiotic Formation of Oligopeptides on TiO2Nanoparticles Require Special Catalytic Sites? Apparently Not
by:
Marco Fabbiani, Marco Pazzi, Marco Vincenti, Gloria Tabacchi, Ettore Fois, Gianmario Martra

Published on 1st August 2018 in:

The oligomerization of non-activated amino acids catalyzed by nanostrucrured mineral oxide surfaces holds promises as a sustainable route for the industrial production of polypeptides. To analyze the influence of the surface type on the catalytic process, we performed, via a mild Chemical Vapor Deposition approach, the oligomerization of Glycine on two samples of TiO2 nanoparticles characterized by different relative amounts of defective surface terminations. Based on infrared spectroscopy and mass spectrometry data, we show herein that the formation of peptide bonds on titania nanoparticles does not require highly energetic surface terminations, but can occur also on the most abundant and thermodynamically most stable {101} facets of nanosized anatase.

Funding

FP7 project SetNanoMetro

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