Bionanocatalysis: From Design to Applications discusses recent advances in nano-biocatalysis, fundamental design concepts and their applications in a variety of industry sectors. Strategies for immobilizing enzymes onto nanocarriers, made from polymers, silicas, carbons, and metals, by physical adsorption, covalent binding, cross-linking, or specific ligand spacers are also discussed as are the advantages, problems and solutions derived from the use of non-porous nanomaterials for enzyme immobilization. This is an important reference source for materials scientists and chemical engineers who…mehr
Bionanocatalysis: From Design to Applications discusses recent advances in nano-biocatalysis, fundamental design concepts and their applications in a variety of industry sectors. Strategies for immobilizing enzymes onto nanocarriers, made from polymers, silicas, carbons, and metals, by physical adsorption, covalent binding, cross-linking, or specific ligand spacers are also discussed as are the advantages, problems and solutions derived from the use of non-porous nanomaterials for enzyme immobilization. This is an important reference source for materials scientists and chemical engineers who would like to learn more about how nanobiocatalysts are designed and used. Biocatalysis has emerged as a sustainable technique to synthesize valuable commodity chemicals with wide applications in various industrial domains, such as in agriculture, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, biofuels, biosensors, biofuel cells, biochemicals, and foods. The synergistic integration of bio-catalysis engineering with nanostructured materials, as unique multifunctional carrier matrices, has emerged as a new interface of nano-biocatalysis (NBC).
PART 1: BASIC PRINCIPLES 1. Nanobiocatalysis-a drive towards applied biocatalysis 2. Bi- or multi-enzymatic nanobiocatalytic systems 3. Mechanisms of structural and functional coordination between enzymes and nanostructured cues 4. Engineering enzyme microenvironments 5. Thermal tuning of enzyme activity by magnetic heating PART 2: PROSPECTIVE NANOCARRIERS TO DESIGN NANO-BIOCATALYSTS 6. Carbon dots-based photocatalyst: synthesis, characteristic attributes, mechanisms, and applications 7. Silica-based nanocarriers 8. Use of magnetic nanoparticles to build magnetic macro porous biocatalyst: prospects and trends PART 3: EMERGING BIOPROCESSING APPLICATIONS 9. Implementation of nanobiocatalysis in food industry 10. Nano-biocatalysis for food and feed application 11. Nanobiocatalysis for Environmental remediation and protection 12. Nanobiocatalysis for therapeutic applications 13. Nanobiocatalysts for drug delivery 14. Nanobiocatalysis for Biofuel production 15. Nanobiocatalysis for pharmacological and therapeutic applications 16. Self-assembly of small molecules for enzyme mimicry 17. Nanostructured biocatalysis for biotechnological applications 18. Immobilization of enzymes on nanomaterials: necessity, opportunities and drawbacks 19. Environmental Remediation and Protection 20. Biofuels cells 21. Extending the Reach of Computational Approaches to Model Enzyme Catalysis 22. Sugar-processing microbial enzymes
PART 1: BASIC PRINCIPLES 1. Nanobiocatalysis-a drive towards applied biocatalysis 2. Bi- or multi-enzymatic nanobiocatalytic systems 3. Mechanisms of structural and functional coordination between enzymes and nanostructured cues 4. Engineering enzyme microenvironments 5. Thermal tuning of enzyme activity by magnetic heating PART 2: PROSPECTIVE NANOCARRIERS TO DESIGN NANO-BIOCATALYSTS 6. Carbon dots-based photocatalyst: synthesis, characteristic attributes, mechanisms, and applications 7. Silica-based nanocarriers 8. Use of magnetic nanoparticles to build magnetic macro porous biocatalyst: prospects and trends PART 3: EMERGING BIOPROCESSING APPLICATIONS 9. Implementation of nanobiocatalysis in food industry 10. Nano-biocatalysis for food and feed application 11. Nanobiocatalysis for Environmental remediation and protection 12. Nanobiocatalysis for therapeutic applications 13. Nanobiocatalysts for drug delivery 14. Nanobiocatalysis for Biofuel production 15. Nanobiocatalysis for pharmacological and therapeutic applications 16. Self-assembly of small molecules for enzyme mimicry 17. Nanostructured biocatalysis for biotechnological applications 18. Immobilization of enzymes on nanomaterials: necessity, opportunities and drawbacks 19. Environmental Remediation and Protection 20. Biofuels cells 21. Extending the Reach of Computational Approaches to Model Enzyme Catalysis 22. Sugar-processing microbial enzymes
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