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김진현

Kim, Jinhyun
Sustainable Energy Materials Laboratory
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Self-Assembled Peptide-Carbon Nitride Hydrogel as a Light-Responsive Scaffold Material

Author(s)
Ko, Jong WanChoi, Woo SeokKim, JinhyunKuk, Su KeunLee, Sahng HaPark, Chan Beum
Issued Date
2017-11
DOI
10.1021/acs.biomac.7b00889
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/84450
Citation
BIOMACROMOLECULES, v.18, no.11, pp.3551 - 3556
Abstract
Peptide self-assembly is a facile route to the development of bioorganic hybrid materials that have sophisticated nanostructures toward diverse applications. Here, we report the synthesis of self-assembled peptide (Fmoc-diphenylalanine, Fmoc-FF)/graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) hydrogels for light harvesting and biomimetic photosynthesis through noncovalent interactions between aromatic rings in Fmoc-FF nanofibers and tris-s-triazine in g-C3N4 nanosheets. According to our analysis, the photocurrent density of the Fmoc-FF/g-C3N4 hydrogel was 1.8x higher (0.82 mu A cm(-1)) than that of the pristine g-C3N4. This is attributed to effective exfoliation of g-C3N4 nanosheets in the Fmoc-FF/g-C3N4 network, facilitating photoinduced electron transfers. The Fmoc-FF/g-C3N4 hydrogel reduced NAD(+) to enzymatically active NADH under light illumination at a high rate of 0.130 mol g(-1) h(-1) and drove light-responsive redox biocatalysis. Moreover, the Fmoc-FF/g-C3N4 scaffold could well-encapsulate key photosynthetic components, such as electron mediators, cofactors, and enzymes, without noticeable leakage, while retaining their functions within the hydrogel. The prominent activity of the Fmoc-FF/g-C3N4 hydrogel for biomimetic photosynthesis resulted from the easy transfer of photoexcited electrons from electron donors to NAD(+) via g-C3N4 and electron mediators as well as the hybridization of key photosynthetic components in a confined space of the nanofiber network.
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
ISSN
1525-7797
Keyword
WATER OXIDATIONVISIBLE-LIGHTPHOTOCATALYTIC ACTIVITYREDOX BIOCATALYSISCATALYSISENZYMEARTIFICIAL PHOTOSYNTHESISNANOSTRUCTURESNANOSHEETSSTABILITY

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