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Bioinspired mechanically stable all-polysaccharide based scaffold for photosynthetic production

Journal of Materials Chemistry B 2023 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tuuli Virkkala, Tekla Tammelin Sergey Kosourov, Ville Rissanen, Vilja Siitonen, Suvi Arola, Suvi Arola, Suvi Arola, Tekla Tammelin Tekla Tammelin Yagut Allahverdiyeva, Tekla Tammelin Tekla Tammelin Tekla Tammelin

Summary

Researchers developed a water-stable, biodegradable hydrogel scaffold by combining cellulose nanofibers with barley-derived hemicellulose (mixed-linkage glucan) that can immobilize microalgae for photosynthetic ethylene production, maintaining stable output for over 120 hours.

We demonstrate the construction of water-stable, biocompatible and self-standing hydrogels as scaffolds for the photosynthetic production of ethylene using a bioinspired all-polysaccharidic design combining TEMPO-oxidised cellulose nanofibers (TCNF) and a cereal plant hemicellulose called mixed-linkage glucan (MLG). We compared three different molecular weight MLGs from barley to increase the wet strength of TCNF hydrogels, and to reveal the mechanisms defining the favourable interactions between the scaffold components. The interactions between MLGs and TCNF were revealed <i>via</i> adsorption studies and interfacial rheology investigations using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D). Our results show that both the MLG solution stability and adsorption behaviour did not exactly follow the well-known polymer adsorption and solubility theories especially in the presence of co-solute ions, in this case nitrates. We prepared hydrogel scaffolds for microalgal immobilisation, and high wet strength hydrogels were achieved with very low dosages of MLG (0.05 wt%) to the TCNF matrix. The all-polysaccharic biocatalytic architectures remained stable and produced ethylene for 120 h with yields comparable to the state-of-the-art scaffolds. Due to its natural origin and biodegradability, MLG offers a clear advantage in comparison to synthetic scaffold components, allowing the mechanical properties and water interactions to be tailored.

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