Author:
Tomizaki Kin-ya,Tonoda Tatsuki,Teramura Shungo,Okazaki Haruka,Imai Takahito,Asano Masahiro
Abstract
The separation and recovery of noble metals is increasingly of interest, in particular the recovery of gold nanocrystals, which have applications in medicine and industry. Typically, metal recovery is performed using liquid–liquid extraction or electrowinning. However, it is necessary to develop noble metal recovery systems providing high selectivity in conjunction with a one-pot setup, ready product recovery, and the use of dilute aqueous solutions. In prior work, our group developed a selective gold recovery process using peptides. This previous research showed that RU065, a nonapeptide containing an anthracene moiety (at a concentration of 2.0 × 10−4 M), is capable of selective reduction of HAuCl4 to recover gold from a solution of HAuCl4 and H2PtCl6, each at 5.0 × 10−5 M. However, peptide molecules are generally costly to synthesize, and therefore it is important to determine the minimum required structural features to design non-peptide anthracene derivatives that could reduce operational costs. In this study, we used RU065 together with 23 of its fragment peptides and investigated the selective precipitation/recovery of metallic gold. RU0654–8, a fragment peptide comprising five amino acid residues (having two lysine, one L-isoleusine, and one L-alanine residue (representing six amide groups) along with an L-2-anthrylalanine residue) provided an Au/Pt atomic ratio of approximately 8, which was comparable to that for the full-length original RU065. The structural features identified in this study are expected to contribute to the design of non-peptide anthracene derivatives for low-cost, one-pot selective gold recovery.
Funder
Ryukoku University
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Subject
Process Chemistry and Technology,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous),Bioengineering
Cited by
1 articles.
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