Precision
Engineering of 2D Protein Layers as Chelating
Biogenic Scaffolds for Selective Recovery of Rare-Earth Elements
Posted on 2022-01-05 - 21:07
Rare-earth
elements, which include the lanthanide series, are key
components of many clean energy technologies, including wind turbines
and photovoltaics. Because most of these 4f metals are at high risk
of supply chain disruption, the development of new recovery technologies
is necessary to avoid future shortages, which may impact renewable
energy production. This paper reports the synthesis of a non-natural
biogenic material as a potential platform for bioinspired lanthanide
extraction. The biogenic material takes advantage of the atomically
precise structure of a 2D crystalline protein lattice with the high
lanthanide binding affinity of hydroxypyridinonate chelators. Luminescence
titration data demonstrated that the engineered protein layers have
affinities for all tested lanthanides in the micromolar-range (dissociation
constants) and a higher binding affinity for the lanthanide ions with
a smaller ionic radius. Furthermore, competitive titrations confirmed
the higher selectivity (up to several orders of magnitude) of the
biogenic material for lanthanides compared to other cations commonly
found in f-element sources. Lastly, the functionalized protein layers
could be reused in several cycles by desorbing the bound metal with
citrate solutions. Taken together, these results highlight biogenic
materials as promising bioadsorption platforms for the selective binding
of lanthanides, with potential applications in the recovery of these
critical elements from waste.
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Pallares, Roger
M.; Charrier, Marimikel; Tejedor-Sanz, Sara; Li, Dong; Ashby, Paul D.; Ajo-Franklin, Caroline M.; et al. (2022). Precision
Engineering of 2D Protein Layers as Chelating
Biogenic Scaffolds for Selective Recovery of Rare-Earth Elements. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.1c10802Â