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What would happen in this experiment?


BlueSpike

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lets say I have a powder of an enzyme which converts fatty acids into hydrogen peroxide. i fill a cup full of a concentrated solution of fatty acids and drop the enzyme into the cup. hydrogen peroxide is an oxidizer so im wondering if this could make an explosive (concentrated enzyme + concentrated fatty acid solution = fiery explosion?)

 

Note: purely hypothetical guys, I'm wondering what enzymes are capable of

Edited by BlueSpike
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might be exothermic with bubbling at most, but not HIGHLY exothermic to the point of fiery explosion. Only way you'd get enough energy to cause an explosion/ massive heat release would be to break the peroxide bonds of the newly synthesized hydrogen peroxide..i.e. a catalyst...of course under pressure... but at that point were talking about explosives... and that's a no no.

 

I don't know off hand of any enzymes that convert fatty acids to H2O2.

 

~ee

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d amino acid oxidase does, as does fatty acid oxidase...

 

and that isn't true, because there's a video on youtube showing hydrogen peroxide causing leather to catch fire

Youtube: 99% hydrogen peroxide on leather

 

h2o2 is a very strong oxidant and this reactivity is used as an advantage in spacecraft propellant

 

There's an enzyme which does break down hydrogen peroxide, called catalase

Edited by BlueSpike
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The fatty acid oxidase certainly needs oxygen to work (the hydrogen peroxide is a by-product).

there's a paper on the measurement of the rate by looking at the removal of oxygen here

http://www.jbc.org/content/173/2/753.full.pdf?origin=publication_detail

 

The other oxidase enzyme also will need to use some other oxidant (most probably oxygen)

"An oxidase is any enzyme that catalyzes an oxidation-reduction reaction involving molecular oxygen (O2) as the electron acceptor. In these reactions, oxygen is reduced to water (H2O) or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)."

from

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxidase

so

So the answer to the question as asked (i fill a cup full of a concentrated solution of fatty acids and drop the enzyme into the cup.) is "nothing much".

There will be a slow reaction as the air diffuses into the mixture and that will make a little hydrogen peroxide.

That peroxide will start to oxidise anything present. The easiest target for oxidation is the enzyme.

So, after a while all the enzyme will be destroyed and the reaction will stop.

Edited by John Cuthber
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