4.8 Article

Enzyme-Mediated Kinetic Control of Fe3+-Tannic Acid Complexation for Interface Engineering

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 44, Pages 52385-52394

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c15503

Keywords

metal-phenolic complex; material-independent coating; single-cell nanoencapsulation; thin film; enzyme; LaMer model

Funding

  1. KAIST Undergraduate Research Program (URP)
  2. Cannabis Medical Inc.
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Education [2021R1A6A1A03038858]
  4. National Research Foundation of Korea [2021R1A6A1A03038858] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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This study investigated the enzyme-mediated kinetic control of Fe2+ oxidation to Fe3+ to achieve thicker coatings in the iron-gall-ink-revisited method. The coating process was considered as nucleation and growth, with kinetics determining the formation of interface-active species.
Supramolecular self-assembly of Fe3+ and tannic acid (TA) has received great attention in the fields of materials science and interface engineering because of its exceptional surface coating properties. Although advances in coating strategies often suggest that kinetics in the generation of interface-active Fe3+-TA species is deeply involved in the film formation, there is no acceptable elucidation for the coating process. In this work, we developed the enzyme-mediated kinetic control of Fe2+ oxidation to Fe3+ in a Fe2+-TA complex in the iron- gall- ink-revisited coating method. Specifically, hydrogen peroxide, produced in the glucose oxidase (GOx)-catalyzed reaction of D-glucose, accelerated Fe2+ oxidation, and the optimized kinetics profoundly facilitated the film formation to be about 9 times thicker. We also proposed a perspective considering the coating process as nucleation and growth. From this viewpoint, the kinetics in the generation of interface-active Fe3+-TA species should be optimized because it determines whether the interface-active species forms a film on the substrate (i.e., heterogeneous nucleation and film growth) or flocculates in solution (i.e., homogeneous nucleation and particle growth). Moreover, GOx was concomitantly embedded into the Fe3+-TA films with sustained catalytic activities, and the GOx-mediated coating system was delightfully adapted to catalytic single-cell nanoencapsulation.

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