16 results on '"Giulia Paggiola"'
Search Results
2. Application of bio-based solvents for biocatalysed synthesis of amides with Pseudomonas stutzeri lipase (PSL)
- Author
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Nolwenn Derrien, Sabine L. Flitsch, James H. Clark, Anthony P. Green, Andrew J. Hunt, Con Robert McElroy, Giulia Paggiola, and Jonathan D. Moseley
- Subjects
Green chemistry ,biocatalysis ,General Chemical Engineering ,Bio based ,Fine chemicals ,pharmaceuticals ,010402 general chemistry ,PSL ,01 natural sciences ,enzyme catalysis ,Enzyme catalysis ,ICGC-8 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,C720 Biological Chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,sustainable chemistry ,Lipase ,biocatalysts ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,green chemistry ,General Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,organic synthesis ,0104 chemical sciences ,Pseudomonas stutzeri ,amides ,solvents ,Biocatalysis ,bio-based ,biology.protein ,F100 Chemistry ,Organic synthesis - Abstract
Bio-based solvents were investigated for the biocatalysed amidation reactions of various ester-amine combinations by Pseudomonas stutzeri lipase (PSL). Reactions were undertaken in a range of green and potentially bio-based solvents including terpinolene, p-cymene, limonene, 2-methyl THF, ɣ-valerolactone, propylene carbonate, dimethyl isosorbide, glycerol triacetate and water. Solvent screenings demonstrated the importance and potential of using non-polar bio-based solvents for favouring aminolysis over hydrolysis; whilst substrate screenings highlighted the unfavourable impact of reactants bearing bulky para- or 4-substituents. Renewable terpene-based solvents (terpinolene, p-cymene, D-limonene) were demonstrated to be suitable bio-based media for PSL amidation reactions. Such solvents could provide a greener and more sustainable alternative to traditional petrochemical derived non-polar solvents. Importantly, once the enzyme (either PSL or CALB) binds with a bulky para-substituted substrate, only small reagents are able to access the active site. This therefore limits the possibility for aminolysis to take place, thereby promoting the hydrolysis. This mechanism of binding supports the widely accepted ‘Ping Pong – Bi Bi’ mechanism used to describe enzyme kinetics. The work highlights the need to further investigate enzyme activity in relation to para- or 4-substituted substrates. A priority in PSL chemistry remains a methodology to tackle the competing hydrolysis reaction.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Can bio-based chemicals meet demand? Global and regional case-study around citrus waste-derived limonene as a solvent for cleaning applications
- Author
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Sytze van Stempvoort, José Manuel Vega Barbero, Giulia Paggiola, Andrew J. Hunt, James H. Clark, and Julen Bustamante
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,Cleaning agent ,Limonene ,010405 organic chemistry ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Supply chain ,Bioengineering ,Chemical industry ,Environmental economics ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Supply and demand ,Biotechnology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Petrochemical ,Work (electrical) ,chemistry ,business - Abstract
One common factor across many economies around the world is their high dependency on petroleum. The chemical sector is no exception and considering the paramount role that solvents play within this industry they make an ideal focus for investigating green transition potential. This work attempts to shed some light on the scarce literature regarding the quantitative assessment of substitution capacity in target markets, by examining a case study of toluene use as an industrial cleaning agent and its replacement by limonene, a widely established citrus-peel-derived alternative in a number of applications. The systematic approach presented here compares market demand against potential supply by evaluating current and projected scenarios based on citrus fruit and juice production both at global and regional level. The results clearly show that the potential for complete substitution of toluene by limonene at global level is certainly out of reach, but encouraging results were obtained in specific regional substitution case studies, considering both citrus-producing and citrus-importing countries. In these cases, there is a clear potential for limonene to substitute toluene as a solvent within and beyond the cleaning sector, leaving space for future work in this area to investigate the transition potential for other important bio-based chemicals. © 2016 Society of Chemical Industry and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Tunable solvents: Shades of green
- Author
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James H. Clark, Giulia Paggiola, James Sherwood, and Sarah Abou-Shehada
- Subjects
Solvent system ,010405 organic chemistry ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,General Chemical Engineering ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,General Chemistry ,Chemical industry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Supercritical fluid ,0104 chemical sciences ,law.invention ,Solvent ,law ,Boiling ,Organic chemistry ,business ,Process engineering ,Distillation - Abstract
Research into the synthesis and application of green solvents is a developing field of interest relevant to a variety of chemical manufacturers. Tunable solvents utilising carbon dioxide lend themselves to a reduction in work-up solvent and can help avoid the need for energy intensive solvent recovery options such as distillation. This perspective examines the potential benefits of tunable solvents to the chemical manufacturing industry and the environment. Freed from the usual reliance on distillation, high boiling solvents with an inherently lessened potential to cause air emissions can be used as part of a tunable solvent system. The application of bio-based solvents as tunable reaction media is highlighted as an area for further development.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Biocatalysis in bio-derived solvents: an improved approach for medium optimisation
- Author
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Andrew J. Hunt, James H. Clark, Giulia Paggiola, James Sherwood, and Con Robert McElroy
- Subjects
Solvent ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Biocatalysis ,Environmental Chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Pollution ,0104 chemical sciences - Abstract
An improved multi-parameter approach to the correlation of enzymatic activity and solvent properties is proposed. The development of the correlation facilitated the introduction of renewable solvents in a CALB catalysed synthesis of fatty esters.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Tools and techniques for solvent selection: green solvent selection guides
- Author
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Thomas J. Farmer, Saimeng Jin, Fergal Byrne, Tabitha H. M. Petchey, C. Robert McElroy, James H. Clark, Andrew J. Hunt, Giulia Paggiola, and James Sherwood
- Subjects
Chemical process ,010405 organic chemistry ,business.industry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Solvent ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,General purpose ,chemistry ,Hazardous waste ,Environmental chemistry ,Organic synthesis ,Biochemical engineering ,Green chemistry metrics ,business ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,Pharmaceutical industry - Abstract
Driven by legislation and evolving attitudes towards environmental issues, establishing green solvents for extractions, separations, formulations and reaction chemistry has become an increasingly important area of research. Several general purpose solvent selection guides have now been published with the aim to reduce use of the most hazardous solvents. This review serves the purpose of explaining the role of these guides, highlighting their similarities and differences. How they can be used most effectively to enhance the greenness of chemical processes, particularly in laboratory organic synthesis and the pharmaceutical industry, is addressed in detail.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. In this issue.
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE chemistry ,ORGANIC synthesis ,METAL nitrides ,PSEUDOMONAS stutzeri - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Application of bio-based solvents for biocatalysed synthesis of amides with Pseudomonas stutzeri lipase (PSL).
- Author
-
Paggiola, Giulia, Derrien, Nolwenn, Moseley, Jonathan D., Green, Anthony, Flitsch, Sabine L., Clark, James H., McElroy, Con Robert, and Hunt, Andrew J.
- Subjects
PSEUDOMONAS stutzeri ,AMIDE synthesis ,SOLVENTS ,LIPASES ,TABLE tennis ,ENZYME kinetics ,PROPYLENE carbonate - Abstract
Bio-based solvents were investigated for the biocatalysed amidation reactions of various ester-amine combinations by Pseudomonas stutzeri lipase (PSL). Reactions were undertaken in a range of green and potentially bio-based solvents including terpinolene, p-cymene, limonene, 2-methyl THF, ɣ-valerolactone, propylene carbonate, dimethyl isosorbide, glycerol triacetate and water. Solvent screenings demonstrated the importance and potential of using non-polar bio-based solvents for favouring aminolysis over hydrolysis; whilst substrate screenings highlighted the unfavourable impact of reactants bearing bulky para- or 4-substituents. Renewable terpene-based solvents (terpinolene, p-cymene, D-limonene) were demonstrated to be suitable bio-based media for PSL amidation reactions. Such solvents could provide a greener and more sustainable alternative to traditional petrochemical derived non-polar solvents. Importantly, once the enzyme (either PSL or CALB) binds with a bulky para-substituted substrate, only small reagents are able to access the active site. This therefore limits the possibility for aminolysis to take place, thereby promoting the hydrolysis. This mechanism of binding supports the widely accepted 'Ping Pong – Bi Bi' mechanism used to describe enzyme kinetics. The work highlights the need to further investigate enzyme activity in relation to para- or 4-substituted substrates. A priority in PSL chemistry remains a methodology to tackle the competing hydrolysis reaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Integrated Cognitive Assessment: Speed and Accuracy of Visual Processing as a Reliable Proxy to Cognitive Performance
- Author
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Khaligh-Razavi, Seyed-Mahdi, Habibi, Sina, Sadeghi, Maryam, Marefat, Haniye, Khanbagi, Mahdiyeh, Nabavi, Seyed Massood, Sadeghi, Elham, and Kalafatis, Chris
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Can bio-based chemicals meet demand? Global and regional case-study around citrus waste-derived limonene as a solvent for cleaning applications.
- Author
-
Paggiola, Giulia, Stempvoort, Sytze Van, Bustamante, Julen, Barbero, José Manuel Vega, Hunt, Andrew J., and Clark, James H.
- Subjects
LIMONENE ,PETROLEUM chemicals ,SUSTAINABLE chemistry ,SUPPLY & demand ,CLEANING compounds - Abstract
One common factor across many economies around the world is their high dependency on petroleum. The chemical sector is no exception and considering the paramount role that solvents play within this industry they make an ideal focus for investigating green transition potential. This work attempts to shed some light on the scarce literature regarding the quantitative assessment of substitution capacity in target markets, by examining a case study of toluene use as an industrial cleaning agent and its replacement by limonene, a widely established citrus-peel-derived alternative in a number of applications. The systematic approach presented here compares market demand against potential supply by evaluating current and projected scenarios based on citrus fruit and juice production both at global and regional level. The results clearly show that the potential for complete substitution of toluene by limonene at global level is certainly out of reach, but encouraging results were obtained in specific regional substitution case studies, considering both citrus-producing and citrus-importing countries. In these cases, there is a clear potential for limonene to substitute toluene as a solvent within and beyond the cleaning sector, leaving space for future work in this area to investigate the transition potential for other important bio-based chemicals. © 2016 Society of Chemical Industry and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Tools and techniques for solvent selection: green solvent selection guides.
- Author
-
Byrne, Fergal, Jin, Saimeng, Paggiola, Giulia, Petchey, Tabitha, Clark, James, Farmer, Thomas, Hunt, Andrew, Robert McElroy, C., and Sherwood, James
- Subjects
SOLVENTS ,SUSTAINABLE chemistry ,HAZARDOUS substances - Abstract
Driven by legislation and evolving attitudes towards environmental issues, establishing green solvents for extractions, separations, formulations and reaction chemistry has become an increasingly important area of research. Several general purpose solvent selection guides have now been published with the aim to reduce use of the most hazardous solvents. This review serves the purpose of explaining the role of these guides, highlighting their similarities and differences. How they can be used most effectively to enhance the greenness of chemical processes, particularly in laboratory organic synthesis and the pharmaceutical industry, is addressed in detail.[Figure not available: see fulltext.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Biocatalysis in bio-derived solvents: an improved approach for medium optimisation.
- Author
-
Paggiola, Giulia, Hunt, Andrew J., McElroy, Con R., Sherwood, James, and Clark, James H.
- Subjects
BIOCATALYSIS ,SOLVENTS ,SOLUTION (Chemistry) ,PLASTICIZERS ,ESTERS - Abstract
An improved multi-parameter approach to the correlation of enzymatic activity and solvent properties is proposed. The development of the correlation facilitated the introduction of renewable solvents in a CALB catalysed synthesis of fatty esters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Frontmatter.
- Subjects
ANALYTICAL chemistry ,CHEMICAL nomenclature ,PHYSICAL & theoretical chemistry ,FACILITY management ,INORGANIC chemistry ,EARTH sciences ,ELECTRONIC journals ,GREEN technology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Green Chemistry and Quality by Design in Process Analytical Technologies and Drug Design
- Author
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Suryakanta Swain , Editor, Bikash Ranjan Jena, Editor, Suryakanta Swain , Editor, and Bikash Ranjan Jena, Editor
- Subjects
- Pharmaceutical industry--Environmental aspects
- Abstract
Quality by design (QbD) is becoming an integral element of the modern pharmaceutical and chemical development approach. In this book, the future ramifications of emergent modern applications of QbD and green analytical chemistry in drug design, process analytical technologies, and bioanalytical process development instruments are discussed. It will reveal and improve the QbD principles used in bioanalysis, process development, downstream processing, and the combination of QbD and green analytical chemistry employing eco-friendly and green solvents for product development. In addition, it will provide complete information regarding applying the QbD concept and ideology to quality control and process development. The book will be beneficial to PhD research scholars, researchers, and postgraduate and undergraduate students of pharmacy and chemical sciences for understanding the concept of quality by design and green chemistry for drug design, as it illustrates the necessary inputs that are related to product quality and, ultimately, process sustainability.
- Published
- 2024
15. Advances in Materials Science Research. Volume 58
- Author
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Maryann C. Wythers and Maryann C. Wythers
- Abstract
This book is a volume of eight selected chapters discussing advances in the research of materials science. The first chapter examines the potential for using conjugated polymers in enzyme-based electrochemical biosensors. The second chapter reviews the synthesis and applications of BODIPY based conjugated polymers. The third chapter discusses the bioprospecting of biofilm producers for bioconcrete production. Chapter Four examines the past, present, and future of iron removal from kaolin through bioleaching. Chapter Five reviews the use of coir fibers as reinforcement in polymer composites. Chapter Six reviews the molecular arrangement of long-chain ferrocenyl derivatives which have asymmetric carbon in their organized molecular films and formation of its helical nanofibers. Chapter Seven is an investigation of the spectral characteristics of composite structures based on porous materials/colloidal quantum dots/ metal and metal oxide nanoparticles for optoelectronic devices and biomedical application. Chapter Eight is a quantum mechanical study (chemical activity descriptors, nlo, nbo, dna/ect cleavage) of ‘4-[4-(1h-benzo[d]imidazol-2-yl)phenoxy]phthalonitrile dimethyl sulfoxide monosolvate'compounds containing dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO).
- Published
- 2022
16. Worldwide Trends in Green Chemistry Education
- Author
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Vânia Zuin, Liliana Mammino, Vânia Zuin, and Liliana Mammino
- Subjects
- Green chemistry--Study and teaching--Forecasting
- Abstract
Educating the next generation of chemists about green chemistry issues, such as waste minimisation and clean synthesis, is vital for environmental sustainability. This book enables green issues to be taught from the underlying principles of all chemistry courses rather than in isolation. Chapters contributed by green chemistry experts from across the globe, with experience in teaching at different academic levels, provide a coherent overview of possible approaches to incorporate green chemistry into existing curriculums. Split into three sections, the book first introduces sustainability and green chemistry education, before focussing on high school green chemistry education initiatives and green chemistry education at undergraduate and post-graduate levels. Useful laboratory experiments and in-class activities to aid teaching are included. This book is a valuable resource for chemical educators worldwide who wish to integrate green chemistry into chemical education in a systematic and holistic way. It is also of interest to anyone wanting to learn more about the different approaches adopted around the world in sustainability education.
- Published
- 2015
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