Light-driven Transformation of Carbon Monoxide into Hydrocarbons using CdS@ZnS : VFe Protein Biohybrids

ChemSusChem. 2023 Oct 20;16(20):e202300981. doi: 10.1002/cssc.202300981. Epub 2023 Aug 7.

Abstract

Enzymatic Fisher-Tropsch (FT) process catalyzed by vanadium (V)-nitrogenase can convert carbon monoxide (CO) to longer-chain hydrocarbons (>C2) under ambient conditions, although this process requires high-cost reducing agent(s) and/or the ATP-dependent reductase as electron and energy sources. Using visible light-activated CdS@ZnS (CZS) core-shell quantum dots (QDs) as alternative reducing equivalent for the catalytic component (VFe protein) of V-nitrogenase, we first report a CZS : VFe biohybrid system that enables effective photo-enzymatic C-C coupling reactions, hydrogenating CO into hydrocarbon fuels (up to C4) that can be hardly achieved with conventional inorganic photocatalysts. Surface ligand engineering optimizes molecular and opto-electronic coupling between QDs and the VFe protein, realizing high efficiency (internal quantum yield >56 %), ATP-independent, photon-to-fuel production, achieving an electron turnover number of >900, that is 72 % compared to the natural ATP-coupled transformation of CO into hydrocarbons by V-nitrogenase. The selectivity of products can be controlled by irradiation conditions, with higher photon flux favoring (longer-chain) hydrocarbon generation. The CZS : VFe biohybrids not only can find applications in industrial CO removal for high-value-added chemical production by using the cheap, renewable solar energy, but also will inspire related research interests in understanding the molecular and electronic processes in photo-biocatalytic systems.

Keywords: Nitrogenases; hydrocarbons; nano-biohybrids; photo-enzymatic reactions; solar fuels.

MeSH terms

  • Adenosine Triphosphate / metabolism
  • Carbon Monoxide*
  • Hydrocarbons / chemistry
  • Nitrogenase* / chemistry
  • Nitrogenase* / metabolism
  • Oxidation-Reduction

Substances

  • zinc sulfide
  • Carbon Monoxide
  • Nitrogenase
  • Hydrocarbons
  • Adenosine Triphosphate