The large, densely packed artificial surface area of artificial lungs results in rapid clotting and device failure. Surface generated nitric oxide (NO) can be used to reduce platelet activation and coagulation on gas exchange fibers, while not inducing patient bleeding due to its short half-life in blood. To generate NO, artificial lungs can be manufactured with PDMS hollow fibers embedded with copper nanoparticles (Cu NP) and supplied with an infusion of the NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP). The SNAP reacts with Cu NP to generate NO. This study investigates clot formation and gas exchange performance of artificial lungs with either NO-generating Cu-PDMS or standard polymethylpentene (PMP) fibers. One miniature artificial lung (MAL) made with 10 wt% Cu-PDMS hollow fibers and one PMP control MAL were attached to sheep in parallel in a veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation circuit (n = 8). Blood flow through each device was set at 300 mL/min, and each device received a SNAP infusion of 0.12 μmol/min. The ACT was between 110 and 180 s in all cases. Blood flow resistance was calculated as a measure of clot formation on the fiber bundle. Gas exchange experiments comparing the two groups were conducted every 24 h at blood flow rates of 300 and 600 mL/min. Devices were removed once the resistance reached 3x baseline (failure) or following 72 h. All devices were imaged using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) at the inlet, outlet, and middle of the fiber bundle. The Cu-PDMS NO generating MALs had a significantly smaller increase in resistance compared to the control devices. Resistance rose from 26 ± 8 and 23 ± 5 in the control and Cu-PDMS devices, respectively, to 35 ± 8 mmHg/(mL/min) and 72 ± 23 mmHg/(mL/min) at the end of each experiment. The resistance and SEM imaging of fiber surfaces demonstrate lower clot formation on Cu-PDMS fibers. Although not statistically significant, oxygen transfer for the Cu-PDMS MALs was 13.3% less than the control at 600 mL/min blood flow rate. Future in vivo studies with larger Cu–PDMS devices are needed to define gas exchange capabilities and anticoagulant activity over a long-term study at clinically relevant ACTs.