
Scalable preparation of silCoat ‐biocatalysts by use of a fluidized‐bed reactor
Author(s) -
Nieguth René,
Wiemann Lars O.,
Eckstein Marrit,
Thum Oliver,
Poncelet Denis,
AnsorgeSchumacher Marion B.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
engineering in life sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.547
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1618-2863
pISSN - 1618-0240
DOI - 10.1002/elsc.201600143
Subject(s) - materials science , leaching (pedology) , fluidized bed , catalysis , coating , silicone , composite number , chemical engineering , siloxane , nanometre , composite material , polymer , chemistry , organic chemistry , environmental science , soil science , engineering , soil water
SilCoat ‐biocatalysts are immobilized enzyme preparations with an outstanding robustness against leaching and mechanical stress and therefore promising tools for technical synthesis. They consist of a composite material made from a solid enzyme carrier and silicone. In this study, a method has been found to enable provision of these catalysts in large scale. It makes use of easily scalable fluidized‐bed technology and, in contrast to the original method, works in almost complete absence of organic solvent. Thus, it is both a fast and safe method. When the Pt‐catalyst required for silicone formation is cast on the solid enzyme carrier before coating, resulting composites resemble the original preparations in morphology, catalytic activity, and stability against leaching and mechanical forces. Only the maximum total content of silicone in the composites lies about 10% w/w lower resulting in an overall leaching stability below the theoretical maximum. When the Pt‐catalyst is mixed with cooled siloxane solution before coating, surficial coating of the enzyme carriers is achieved, which provides maximum leaching stability at very low silicone consumption. Thus, the technology offers the possibility to produce both composite and for the first time also core‐shell silCoat ‐particles, and optimize leaching stability over mechanical strength according to process requirements.