Bio-Inspired Polymer Membrane Surface Cleaning

Abstract

To generate polyethersulfone membranes with a biocatalytically active surface, pancreatin was covalently immobilized. Pancreatin is a mixture of digestive enzymes such as protease, lipase, and amylase. The resulting membranes exhibit self-cleaning properties after “switching on” the respective enzyme by adjusting pH and temperature. Thus, the membrane surface can actively degrade a fouling layer on its surface and regain initial permeability. Fouling tests with solutions of protein, oil, and mixtures of both, were performed, and the membrane’s ability to self-clean the fouled surface was characterized. Membrane characterization was conducted by investigation of the immobilized enzyme concentration, enzyme activity, water permeation flux, fouling tests, porosimetry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy.

Description
Keywords
Catalytic properties, Enzyme immobilization, Polymer membrane, Self-cleaning, Surface modification
Citation
Schulze, A., Breite, D., Kim, Y., Schmidt, M., Thomas, I., Went, M., et al. (2017). Bio-Inspired Polymer Membrane Surface Cleaning. 9(3). https://doi.org//10.3390/polym9030097
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License
CC BY 4.0 Unported