McDonald Timothy J, Svedruzic Drazenka, Kim Yong-Hyun, Blackburn Jeffrey L, Zhang S B, King Paul W, Heben Michael J
Energy Sciences, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, Colorado 80401, USA.
Nano Lett. 2007 Nov;7(11):3528-34. doi: 10.1021/nl072319o. Epub 2007 Oct 30.
Many envision a future where hydrogen is the centerpiece of a sustainable, carbon-free energy supply. For example, the energy in sunlight may be stored by splitting water into H2 and O2 using inorganic semiconductors and photoelectrochemical approaches or with artificial photosynthetic systems that seek to mimic the light absorption, energy transfer, electron transfer, and redox catalysis that occurs in green plants. Unfortunately, large scale deployment of artificial water-splitting technologies may be impeded by the need for the large amounts of precious metals required to catalyze the multielectron water-splitting reactions. Nature provides a variety of microbes that can activate the dihydrogen bond through the catalytic activity of [NiFe] and [FeFe] hydrogenases, and photobiological approaches to water splitting have been advanced. One may also consider a biohybrid approach; however, it is difficult to interface these sensitive, metalloenzymes to other materials and systems. Here we show that surfactant-suspended carbon single-walled nanotubes (SWNTs) spontaneously self-assemble with [FeFe] hydrogenases in solution to form catalytically active biohybrids. Photoluminescence excitation and Raman spectroscopy studies show that SWNTs act as molecular wires to make electrical contact to the biocatalytic region of hydrogenase. Hydrogenase mediates electron injection into nanotubes having appropriately positioned lowest occupied molecular orbital levels when the H2 partial pressure is varied. The hydrogenase is strongly attached to the SWNTs, so mass transport effects are eliminated and the absolute potential of the electronic levels of the nanotubes can be unambiguously measured. Our findings reveal new nanotube physics and represent the first example of "wiring-up" an hydrogenase with another nanoscale material. This latter advance offers a nonprecious metal route to the design of new biohybrid architectures and building blocks for hydrogen-related technologies.
许多人设想未来氢将成为可持续、无碳能源供应的核心。例如,太阳光中的能量可以通过使用无机半导体和光电化学方法将水分解为H2和O2来储存,或者利用人工光合系统来储存,该系统试图模拟绿色植物中发生的光吸收、能量转移、电子转移和氧化还原催化过程。不幸的是,人工水分解技术的大规模应用可能会受到催化多电子水分解反应所需大量贵金属的阻碍。自然界提供了多种微生物,它们可以通过[NiFe]和[FeFe]氢化酶的催化活性激活二氢键,并且光生物水分解方法也取得了进展。人们也可以考虑生物杂交方法;然而,将这些敏感的金属酶与其他材料和系统连接起来很困难。在这里,我们展示了表面活性剂悬浮的碳单壁纳米管(SWNTs)在溶液中与[FeFe]氢化酶自发自组装,形成具有催化活性的生物杂交体。光致发光激发和拉曼光谱研究表明,SWNTs充当分子导线,与氢化酶的生物催化区域进行电接触。当H2分压变化时,氢化酶介导电子注入到具有适当定位的最低占据分子轨道能级的纳米管中。氢化酶与SWNTs紧密相连,因此消除了传质效应,并且可以明确测量纳米管电子能级的绝对电位。我们的发现揭示了新的纳米管物理学,并代表了用另一种纳米级材料“连接”氢化酶的第一个例子。后一项进展为设计与氢相关技术的新型生物杂交结构和构建块提供了一条无贵金属的途径。