2017 Annual Meeting
(561e) Heterogeneous Dephosphorylation Using Ceria Nanocatalysts: Identifying the Active Site and the Rate-Determining Step
Authors
One solution toward this sustainability challenge is to extract phosphorus from phosphorylated biomolecules (e.g., phospholipids and nucleic acids) and recycle it for fertilizer production. This is conventionally done via fermentation, which produces struvite, a precipitate that can be processed to make phosphorus fertilizers. Alternatively, a more robust approach is catalytic dephosphorylation. By hydrolytic cleavage of the phosphate ester bond, free phosphate anions can be released from biomass and agriculture wastes, which can then be captured and regenerated as chemical streams for further applications. Previously studies of cerium oxide (CeO2) nanocrystals for biological applications (e.g., cancer therapy, pharmacology and toxin mitigation) have shown that these nanomaterials can function as artificial phosphatases and catalyze the dephosphorylation of nucleic acids, peptides, DNA and RNA under ambient conditions. Thereby CeO2 is believed to be a promising catalyst for dephosphorylation and recovery of phosphorus from biomass and organic wastes
Here we report on catalytic dephosphorylation for recovery of phosphates from organic and biological molecules. Ceria (CeO2) nanocrystals were synthesized with shape control and applied as âartificial phosphatasesâ to cleave the phosphate ester bond in para-nitrophenyl phosphate (p-NPP) and release free phosphate anions in aqueous solutions. After a fundamental study on this model reactant, CeO2 nanocrystals were also applied to feedstocks to phospholipids and nucleic acids. The dephosphorylation reaction was studied on the CeO2 nanocrystals at various temperatures to evaluate the dependences of rate constant, activation energy and recyclability on the particle shape. The structure-property relationship established in these studies suggests that the oxygen vacancies on the surface of CeO2 are the active sites for dephosphorylation. Adsorption studies of poisoning species allow for the proposal of a potential rate-determing step in this reaction.