Green polymer chemistry : biobased materials and biocatalysis
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Green polymer chemistry : biobased materials and biocatalysis
(ACS symposium series, 1192)
American Chemical Society , Distributed in print by Oxford University Press, c2015
Available at / 5 libraries
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University Library for Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo図
578.4:C385010950706
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Green chemistry is the design of chemical products and processes that reduce or eliminate the use or generation of hazardous substances. Green polymer chemistry is an extension of green chemistry to polymer science and engineering. Developments in this area have been stimulated by health and environmental concerns, interest in sustainability, desire to decrease the dependence on petroleum, and opportunities to design and produce "green" products and processes. Major
advances include new uses of biobased feedstock, green reactions, green processing methodologies, and green polymeric products.
A current feature of green polymer chemistry is that it is both global and multidisciplinary. Thus, publications in this field are spread out over different journals in different countries. Moreover, a successful research effort may involve collaborations of people in various disciplines, such as organic chemistry, polymer chemistry, material science, chemical engineering, biochemistry, molecular biology, microbiology, enzymology, toxicology, environmental science, and analytical chemistry.
This book combines the major interdisciplinary research in this field and is targeted for scientists, engineers, and students, who are involved or interested in green polymer chemistry. These may include chemists, biochemists, material scientists, chemical engineers, microbiologists, molecular biologists, enzymologists, toxicologists, environmental scientists, and analytical chemists. It can be a textbook for a course on green chemistry and also a reference book for people who need information
on specific topics involving biocatalysis and biobased materials.
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Green Polymer Chemistry: Some Recent Developments and Examples
Enzymatic and Chemo-enzymatic Approaches
2. Green Polymer Chemistry: Enzyme-Catalyzed Polymer Functionalization
3. Chemoenzymatic Synthesis and Characterization of Polyester-Urethanes Bearing Amino-Acids Moieties
4. Chemo-enzymatic Synthesis, Derivatizations, and Polymerizations of Renewable Phenolic Monomers Derived from Ferulic Acid and Biobased Polyols: An Access to Sustainable Copolyesters, Poly(ester-urethane)s, and Poly(ester-alkenamer)s
5. Emerging Enzyme-Based Technologies for Wastewater Treatment
6. Enzymatic Synthesis of Non-Natural Oligo- and Polysaccharides by Phosphorylase-Catalyzed Glycosylations Using Analogue Substrates
7. Water-Insoluble Glucans from Sucrose via Glucansucrases. Factors Influencing Structures and Yields
8. Biosynthesis, Properties, and Biodegradation of Lactate-Based Polymers
Other Catalysts and Functional Peptides
9. Combining Sustainable Polymerization Routes for the Preparation of Polyesters, Polycarbonates, and Copolymers
10. Aluminum Salen and Salan Polymerization Catalysts: From Monomer Scope to Macrostructure Control
11. Creation of Functional Peptides by Evolutionary Engineering with Bioorthogonal Incorporation of Artificial Components
Biobased Materials from Triglyceride Feedstock
12. Thermoplastic Elastomers from Vegetable Oils via Reversible Addition-Fragmentation Chain Transfer Polymerization
13. From Biorefinery to Performance Technology: Transforming Renewable Olefinic Building Blocks into Lubricants and Other High-Value Products
14. Polyacids from Corn Oil as Curing Agents for Epoxy Resins
15. Modifications of Plant Oils for Value-Added Uses
16. Soy-Based Building Blocks for Advanced Photocure Coating Systems
17. Solid Lipid Nanoparticle - Functional Template of Meso-Macrostructured Silica Materials
Biobased Materials from Carbohydrate Feedstock
18. In Situ Metal-Free Synthesis of Polylactide Enantiomers Grafted from Nanoclays of High Thermostability
19. A Novel Renewable Thermoplastic Polyacetal by Polymerization of Glycolaldehyde Dimer, a Major Product of the Fast Pyrolysis of Cellulosic Feedstock
20. Development of Cardanol-Bonded Cellulose Resin with Nonfood Plant Resources: Low Energy Heterogeneous Synthesis Process
21. Phosphorus Flame Retardants from Esters of Isosorbide and 10-Undecenoic Acid
Materials from Other Biobased Resources
22. Bio-Based Epoxy Resins from Diphenolate Esters--Replacing the Diglycidyl Ether of Bisphenol A
23. Influence of Furanyl Building Blocks on the Cure Kinetics of a Renewable Epoxy-Amine System
24. Polyesters from Bio-Aromatics
25. Development and Characterization of Pressure-Sensitive Adhesives from Dimer Acid and Epoxides
26. Structure-Property Relationships for Polycyanurate Networks Derived from Renewable Resources
27. Bio-Based Sources for Terephthalic Acid
28. Green Polymer Aerogels
by "Nielsen BookData"