2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(370b) A Biomimetic Liquid Membrane Containing a Surfactant-Coated Biocatalysis for Chiral Separation
Authors
Lipase from Candida rugosa (CRL) is good at catalyzing esterification in the feed phase (at Interface 1), and another lipase from porcine pancreas (PPL) is an ester hydrolysis catalyst in the receiving phase (at Interface 2). (S)-Ibuprofen is selectively esterified by CRL in the feed phase, and the resulting ester dissolves into the ionic liquid phase of the SLM and diffuses across the SLM. At Interface 2 in the receiving phase, PPL catalyses the ester hydrolysis to produce the initial ibuprofen and ethanol, which are water soluble. Finally, the (S)-ibuprofen is selectively transported through the SLM, based on the enantioselectivity of lipases. A control experiment performed without the lipases resulted in no ibuprofen transport through the SLM. This is the first report that successfully demonstrates that enzyme-facilitated SLM based on ionic liquids can be utilized for the optical resolution of racemic ibuprofen.