Photoelectrodes with polydopamine thin films incorporating a bacterial photyoenzyme
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
A fabrication strategy of photoactive biohybrid electrodes based on the
immobilization of the bacterial reaction center (RC) onto indium tin oxide
(ITO) is proposed. The RC is an integral photoenzyme that converts photons
into stable charge-separated states with a quantum yield close to one. The
photogenerated electron-hole pair can be eventually exploited, with suitable redox mediators, to produce photocurrents. To this purpose, RC must
be effectively anchored on the electrode surface and simple strategies for its
stable immobilization ensuring prolonged enzyme photoactivity are strongly
desired. In this work, polydopamine (PDA), a polymer reminiscent of the natural melanin, is used to anchor the RC on the electrode surface. PDA is easily
prepared in situ by spontaneous polymerization of dopamine in slightly alkaline aerated buffered RC solution. This reaction, carried out in the presence of
an ITO substrate dipped into the solution, directly leads to a stable RC-PDA/
ITO photoelectrode with 20 nm film thickness and 50% of fully functional RC
occupancy. Photocurrents densities recorded using this photoelectrode are
comparable to those obtained with far more sophisticated immobilization
techniques. The RC-PDA films are fully characterized by visible-near-infrared
absorption spectroscopy, ellipsometry, atomic force, and scanning electron
microscopies
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
photoactive biohybrid electrodes; bacterial reaction center (RC); polydopamine (PDA)
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