| Literature DB >> 32411102 |
Patricia Falkenstein1, Daniel Gräsing1, Pavlo Bielytskyi1, Wolfgang Zimmermann2, Jörg Matysik1, Ren Wei2, Chen Song1.
Abstract
The biocatalytic degradation of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) emerged recently as a promising alternative plastic recycling method. However, limited activity of previously known enzymes against post-consumer PET materials still prevents the application on an industrial scale. In this study, the influence of ultraviolet (UV) irradiation as a potential pretreatment method for the enzymatic degradation of PET was investigated. Attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) and 1H solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis indicated a shortening of the polymer chains of UV-treated PET due to intra-chain scissions. The degradation of UV-treated PET films by a polyester hydrolase resulted in significantly lower weight losses compared to the untreated sample. We also examined site-specific and segmental chain dynamics over a time scale of sub-microseconds to seconds using centerband-only detection of exchange, rotating-frame spin-lattice relaxation (T 1 ρ ), and dipolar chemical shift correlation experiments which revealed an overall increase in the chain rigidity of the UV-treated sample. The observed dynamic changes are most likely associated with the increased crystallinity of the surface, where a decreased accessibility for the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis was found. Moreover, our NMR study provided further knowledge on how polymer chain conformation and dynamics of PET can mechanistically influence the enzymatic degradation.Entities:
Keywords: chain dynamics; plastic recycling; polyester hydrolases; solid-state NMR; surface crystallinity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32411102 PMCID: PMC7199389 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1(A) Experimental setup for the UV irradiation of the PET powder sample. (B) ATR-FTIR spectra of the PET powder sample before (cyan) and after (red) UV treatment showing only the characteristic region from 2250 to 4000 cm–1. (C) Proposed products obtained by UV irradiation of PET. (D) 1H solution NMR spectra of untreated and UV-treated PET showing the relevant spectral regions from 3.8 to 4.8 ppm and 7.8 to 8.2 ppm. The relative integral ratios are given below the respective signals with the CH2 signal at 4.01 ppm as the unit. Intensities of the HFIP signal (green) and the CH2 signal (purple) are increased by a factor of 4 and 32, respectively. The 13C satellites of the parent HFIP signal are marked with asterisks.
FIGURE 2Average percentage of weight loss of (A) untreated and (B) UV-treated PET films after enzymatic degradation performed at 70°C for 24 h. The standard deviations are obtained from at least triplicate experiments.
FIGURE 3(A) 13C CP/MAS spectra showing only the characteristic spectral region for the carbons of the ethylene glycol (EG) unit before (left) and after (right) UV irradiation at 30 and 70°C using a spinning frequency of 12.5 kHz. The trans and gauche contents were quantified by fitting a Voigt function to the experimental spectra (purple). Trans and gauche conformations were assigned according to Gabriëlse et al. (1994). (B) 1H–13C dephasing curves for the EG (left) and the phenylene unit of PET (right) obtained from DIPSHIFT experiments at 30 and 70°C using a spinning frequency of 8 kHz. DIPSHIFT curves were fitted by using 17 and 16 points, respectively, for the ethylene and the aromatic C-H groups.
FIGURE 4Pure-exchange CODEX signals as a function of mixing time (tm) for the protonated aromatic carbons at 30 and 70°C before (dark/light blue) and after (red/pink) UV irradiation. CODEX experiments were performed at a spinning frequency of 12.5 kHz. Solid lines represent fits of the experimental data to a stretched exponential. The final exchange intensity E and the fraction fm of mobile segments is given for each curve. The number M of equivalent orientational sites accessed by a specific carbon in the motional process which was used for calculating fm is shown in brackets.
FIGURE 5The T1(1H) relaxation times (in milliseconds) for the different carbons of PET before (blue) and after (red) UV irradiation at 30°C (A) and at 70°C (B). T1(1H) experiments were performed at a spinning speed of 8 kHz with varying spin-lock pulse lengths between 0.01 and 50 ms. T1(1H) values and corresponding error bars were obtained from the fits of the normalized peak intensities against the spin-lock time to a single exponential curve.