4.8 Review

Heterogeneity in enzyme/metal-organic framework composites for CO2 transformation reactions

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 25, Issue 11, Pages 4196-4221

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2gc04682b

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Enzymatic reactions have emerged as a promising alternative to traditional chemical catalysis for CO2 conversion. However, the use of enzymes is limited due to their fragility, instability, and lack of recyclability. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have recently gained attention as immobilization scaffolds for enzymes. This review discusses the various forms of heterogeneity in enzyme/MOF systems and explores their benefits, synthesis strategies, and recent research progress. The integration of enzymatic systems and MOFs for CO2 conversion is also examined, alongside the challenges and potential future directions of biocatalytic CO2 conversion using MOF-based biocatalysts.
Enzymatic reactions represent a promising alternative to chemical catalysis, including chemical, photochemical, and electrochemical processes, for the conversion of CO2 into value-added products. However, the practical implementation of enzymes is restricted by their inherent structural fragility, inadequate stability, and limited recyclability. Recently, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have garnered significant interest as immobilization scaffolds to afford protection to enzymes. MOFs are a class of porous materials with immense chemical and structural tunability derived from their organic and inorganic building units. Considering that heterogeneity is a fundamental characteristic in biological systems, imparting chemical pattern, pore structure/environment, enzyme, and/or component heterogeneity in enzyme/MOF composites can significantly ameliorate the biocatalyst design. In this review, we initially discuss the existing forms of heterogeneity in enzyme/MOF systems, which are categorized as chemical pattern heterogeneity, pore heterogeneity, enzyme heterogeneity, and component heterogeneity. Subsequently, we summarize the benefits, synthetic strategies, and recent research progress for each type of heterogeneity in MOF-based biocomposites. Next, we outline the state-of-the-art enzymatic systems for the CO2 conversion reaction together with their integration in enzyme/MOF systems. Finally, we present our perspectives on the research challenges and potential future directions of biocatalytic CO2 conversion using MOF-based biocatalysts.

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