Abstract

Abstract The dissemination of technologies for poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) recycling is of paramount importance in the context of the plastics circular economy. One of the most promising alternatives is to use enzymes as catalysts for PET depolymerization to its monomers, but this route still needs improvement, especially regarding titer and productivity. In the present work, a sequential approach comprised of fractional factorial and central composite rotatable designs, the path of steepest ascent and one-way evaluation of variable effect, was performed to address these limitations, during assorted post-consumer PET (PC-PET) hydrolysis catalyzed by Humicola insolens cutinase. The highest terephthalic acid concentration and productivity during PC-PET hydrolysis were 100.9 mM (16.8 g/L) and 14.4 mM/day, corresponding to overall improvements of 10-fold and 20-fold, respectively. These data are among the best results described so far for enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of used PET packages. Also, the use of a single enzyme system, instead of multiple biocatalysts to achieve final conversion of PET to its monomers, lowers the process complexity and costs.

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