Photolysis of water for H 2 production with the use of biological and artificial catalysts
- 7 February 1980
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences
- Vol. 295 (1414) , 473-476
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.1980.0143
Abstract
An aqueous mixture of chloroplasts, hydrogenase and an electron transfer catalyst on illumination liberates H 2 , the source of the H atoms being water. The rate and duration of H 2 production from such a system depends on the stability of chloroplast and hydrogenase activities in light and oxygen. Both chloroplasts and hydrogenases can be stabilized to a certain degree by immobilization in gels or by incubation in bovine serum albumin. Natural electron carriers of hydrogenases are ferredoxin, cytochrome c 3 and NAD. Viologen dyes and synthetic iron-sulphur particles (Jeevanu) can substitute for the biological carriers. Methyl viologen, photoreduced in the presence of chloroplasts, can liberate H 2 in combination with Pt (Adam’s catalyst). An aqueous solution of proflavine can be photoreduced in the presence of organic electron donors such as EDTA, cysteine, dithiothreitol, etc.; the reduced proflavine can subsequently liberate H 2 with MV-Pt, MV-hydrogenase, ferredoxin-hydrogenase or cytochrome-hydrogenase systems.Keywords
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