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Enzymatic Reaction in a Capillary Microreactor with Surface-Immobilized Enzyme

INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH [2024]
Jun Liang, Huiting Xu, Zhixi Zhang, Yaqian Bian, Qiang Zhang, Weiyi Su, Yuqi Hu, Chunli Li, Xiong Yu, Honghai Wang
ABSTRACT

Enzymatic processes coupled with continuous microfluidic techniques have significant application prospects in pharmaceuticals and fine chemicals. It is important to stably load enzymes in microreactors. This study reported a sol–gel method for preparing wall-coated immobilized enzyme microreactors (W-IMERs) by entrapment of Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB). The W-IMERs were simply constructed in one step by a flow coating process in a capillary. Compared with the free enzyme, the tolerance of immobilized enzyme to ethanol and temperature is significantly improved, and the yield of immobilized enzyme activity is 76.12% in the batch reactor. In W-IMERs, the yield of immobilized enzyme activity increased to 82.95%. The W-IMERs maintained stable activity in 10 cycles for up to 30 days. A CFD model was also established to explore the relationship between the internal reaction and the mass transfer in W-IMERs. The relationship between the internal and external diffusion limits of W-IMERs and the overall reaction rate was analyzed by dimensionless numbers. The results indicated that sol–gel flow coating is a simple and effective method for the preparation of enzymatic microreactors. An in-depth understanding of the relationship between diffusion limitation and reaction rate will have a significant impact on the overall performance of enzyme-catalyzed microreactors.

MATERIALS

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