TY - JOUR
T1 - Engineered Protein-Based Ionic Conductors for Sustainable Energy Storage Applications
AU - Cortés-Ossa, Juan David
AU - Blesio, Paolo
AU - Fernandez-Castro, Marcial
AU - Almonte, Lisa
AU - Fernandez, Maxence
AU - Liutkus, Mantas
AU - Pandurangan, Perumal
AU - Sabater, Carlos
AU - Villaverde, Aitor
AU - Melle-Franco, Manuel
AU - Ashkenazy, Nurit
AU - Jiménez-Ángeles, Felipe
AU - Morant-Miñana, M. Carmen
AU - Calvo, M. Reyes
AU - Cortajarena, Aitziber L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Protein-based biomaterials offer sustainable and biocompatible alternatives to traditional ionic conductors, essential for advancing green energy storage and bioelectronic applications. In this work, a robust, intrinsically self-assembling repeat protein scaffold to enhance ionic conductivity through the selective incorporation of glutamic acids is engineered. These mutations increase the number of available protonation sites and promote the formation of well-defined charge pathways. The self-assembly properties of the system enable the propagation of molecular-level modifications to the macroscopic scale, yielding self-standing protein films with significantly improved ionic conductivity. Specifically, engineered protein-based films exhibit an order of magnitude higher conductivity than their unmodified counterparts, with a further ten-fold enhancement through controlled addition of salt ions. Mechanistic analysis shows that the conductivity enhancement originates from the intertwined contributions of proton transport, hydration, and ion diffusion, all promoted by engineered charged residues. Finally, films of the best-performing variant are integrated, as both separator and electrolyte, into a supercapacitor device with competitive energy storage performance. These findings highlight the potential of rational protein design to create biocompatible, sustainable, and efficient ionic conductors with the stability and processability required to be successfully integrated into the next generation of energy storage and bioelectronic devices.
AB - Protein-based biomaterials offer sustainable and biocompatible alternatives to traditional ionic conductors, essential for advancing green energy storage and bioelectronic applications. In this work, a robust, intrinsically self-assembling repeat protein scaffold to enhance ionic conductivity through the selective incorporation of glutamic acids is engineered. These mutations increase the number of available protonation sites and promote the formation of well-defined charge pathways. The self-assembly properties of the system enable the propagation of molecular-level modifications to the macroscopic scale, yielding self-standing protein films with significantly improved ionic conductivity. Specifically, engineered protein-based films exhibit an order of magnitude higher conductivity than their unmodified counterparts, with a further ten-fold enhancement through controlled addition of salt ions. Mechanistic analysis shows that the conductivity enhancement originates from the intertwined contributions of proton transport, hydration, and ion diffusion, all promoted by engineered charged residues. Finally, films of the best-performing variant are integrated, as both separator and electrolyte, into a supercapacitor device with competitive energy storage performance. These findings highlight the potential of rational protein design to create biocompatible, sustainable, and efficient ionic conductors with the stability and processability required to be successfully integrated into the next generation of energy storage and bioelectronic devices.
KW - bioelectronics
KW - biomaterials
KW - ionic conductivity
KW - protein engineering
KW - supercapacitors
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105020697086
U2 - 10.1002/adma.202508838
DO - 10.1002/adma.202508838
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105020697086
SN - 0935-9648
JO - Advanced Materials
JF - Advanced Materials
ER -