Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction

Polymer monoliths modified by using nanoparticles (NPs) integrate high NP specific surface area with different monolith surface chemistry and high porosity. As a result, they have extensive applications within different fields, whereas nanomaterial-functionalised porous polymer monoliths have elicit...

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Main Authors: Alzahrani Eman, Alkhudaidy Ashwaq T.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-03-01
Series:Polish Journal of Chemical Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/pjct-2020-0004
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spelling doaj-55be22f5441949848531cc04f06f02502021-09-05T14:01:02ZengSciendoPolish Journal of Chemical Technology1899-47412020-03-01221182810.2478/pjct-2020-0004pjct-2020-0004Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extractionAlzahrani Eman0Alkhudaidy Ashwaq T.1Chemistry Department, Faculty of Science, Taif University, Taif, Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaChemistry Department, Faculty of Science, Taif University, Taif, Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaPolymer monoliths modified by using nanoparticles (NPs) integrate high NP specific surface area with different monolith surface chemistry and high porosity. As a result, they have extensive applications within different fields, whereas nanomaterial-functionalised porous polymer monoliths have elicited considerable interest from investigators. This study is aimed at fabricating organic polymer-based monoliths from polybutyl methacrylate-co-ethylenedimethacrylate (BuMA-co-EDMA) monoliths prior to immobilization of gold or silver metal on the pore surface of the monoliths using reducing reagent (extracts of lemon peels). This was intended to denote a sustainable technique of immobilizing nanoparticles that are advantageous over physical and chemical techniques because it is safe in terms of handling, readily available, environmentally friendly, and cheap. Two different methods were used in the study to effectively immobilize nanoparticles on monolithic components. The outcomes showed that soaking the monolith rod in the prepared nano solution directly and placing it within ovens at temperatures of 80°C constituted the most effective method. Characterisation of the fabricated monolith was undertaken using SEM/EDX analysis, UV-vis. spectra analysis, and visual observation. The SEM analysis showed that nanoparticles were extensively immobilised on the surface polymers. Another peak was attained through EDX analysis, thus confirming the Au atom existence at 2.83% alongside another peak that proved the Ag atom existence at 1.92%. The fabricated components were used as sorbents for purifying protein. The ideal performance was achieved using gold nanoparticles (GNPs) immobilised organic monolith that attained a greater pepsin extraction recovery compared to silver nanoparticles (SNPs) immobilised organic monoliths alongside bare organic-based monolith.https://doi.org/10.2478/pjct-2020-0004polymer monolithimmobilizationmetal nanoparticlespepsin purification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alzahrani Eman
Alkhudaidy Ashwaq T.
spellingShingle Alzahrani Eman
Alkhudaidy Ashwaq T.
Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction
Polish Journal of Chemical Technology
polymer monolith
immobilization
metal nanoparticles
pepsin purification
author_facet Alzahrani Eman
Alkhudaidy Ashwaq T.
author_sort Alzahrani Eman
title Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction
title_short Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction
title_full Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction
title_fullStr Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction
title_full_unstemmed Eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction
title_sort eco-friendly production of metal nanoparticles immobilised on organic monolith for pepsin extraction
publisher Sciendo
series Polish Journal of Chemical Technology
issn 1899-4741
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Polymer monoliths modified by using nanoparticles (NPs) integrate high NP specific surface area with different monolith surface chemistry and high porosity. As a result, they have extensive applications within different fields, whereas nanomaterial-functionalised porous polymer monoliths have elicited considerable interest from investigators. This study is aimed at fabricating organic polymer-based monoliths from polybutyl methacrylate-co-ethylenedimethacrylate (BuMA-co-EDMA) monoliths prior to immobilization of gold or silver metal on the pore surface of the monoliths using reducing reagent (extracts of lemon peels). This was intended to denote a sustainable technique of immobilizing nanoparticles that are advantageous over physical and chemical techniques because it is safe in terms of handling, readily available, environmentally friendly, and cheap. Two different methods were used in the study to effectively immobilize nanoparticles on monolithic components. The outcomes showed that soaking the monolith rod in the prepared nano solution directly and placing it within ovens at temperatures of 80°C constituted the most effective method. Characterisation of the fabricated monolith was undertaken using SEM/EDX analysis, UV-vis. spectra analysis, and visual observation. The SEM analysis showed that nanoparticles were extensively immobilised on the surface polymers. Another peak was attained through EDX analysis, thus confirming the Au atom existence at 2.83% alongside another peak that proved the Ag atom existence at 1.92%. The fabricated components were used as sorbents for purifying protein. The ideal performance was achieved using gold nanoparticles (GNPs) immobilised organic monolith that attained a greater pepsin extraction recovery compared to silver nanoparticles (SNPs) immobilised organic monoliths alongside bare organic-based monolith.
topic polymer monolith
immobilization
metal nanoparticles
pepsin purification
url https://doi.org/10.2478/pjct-2020-0004
work_keys_str_mv AT alzahranieman ecofriendlyproductionofmetalnanoparticlesimmobilisedonorganicmonolithforpepsinextraction
AT alkhudaidyashwaqt ecofriendlyproductionofmetalnanoparticlesimmobilisedonorganicmonolithforpepsinextraction
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