Refine
Year of publication
Institute
- Fachbereich Chemie und Biotechnologie (551) (remove)
Language
- English (551) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (472)
- Conference Proceeding (24)
- Part of a Book (18)
- Patent (17)
- Book (9)
- Conference: Meeting Abstract (8)
- Conference Poster (1)
- Preprint (1)
- Review (1)
Keywords
- Heparin (3)
- Bacillaceae (2)
- Biorefinery (2)
- Biotechnological application (2)
- Butanol (2)
- Chemometrics (2)
- IR spectroscopy (2)
- NMR spectroscopy (2)
- Principal component analysis (2)
- Standardization (2)
- Subtilases (2)
- Subtilisin (2)
- bubble column (2)
- methanation (2)
- plug flow reactor (2)
- qNMR (2)
- (Poly)saccharides (1)
- (R)- or (S)- gamma-valerolactone (1)
- 4-hydroxy valeric acid (1)
- ABE (1)
- Acid crash (1)
- Algal Turf Scrubber (1)
- Algal–bacterial bioflm (1)
- Alginate beads (1)
- Alkalihalobacillus okhensis (1)
- Aloe vera (1)
- Analytics (1)
- Authenticity (1)
- Bioeconomy (1)
- Bioethanol (1)
- Biofuel (1)
- Biogas (1)
- Biological hydrogen (1)
- Biomass (1)
- Biorefinery definitions (1)
- Bladder (1)
- Bragg peak (1)
- Broad pH spectrum (1)
- C. acetobutylicum (1)
- CRISPR/Cas9 (1)
- Carrier solvents (1)
- Chimeric liver-humanized mice (1)
- Chiralidon-R (1)
- Chiralidon-S (1)
- Chondroitin sulfate (1)
- Circular bioeconomy (1)
- Clostridium acetobutylicum (1)
- Crude heparin (1)
- Cyclotron production (1)
- Dark fermentation (1)
- Decentral (1)
- Dehydrogenase (1)
- Detergent protease (1)
- Deuterated solvents (1)
- Deuterium NMR (1)
- Diaphorase (1)
- Dietary supplements (1)
- Drug distribution (1)
- Drug metabolism (1)
- Electronic cigarettes (1)
- Enzymatic biosensor (1)
- Extracellular enzymes (1)
- Free-base nicotine (1)
- Ga-68 (1)
- Glucosamine (1)
- Growth modelling (1)
- Halotolerant protease (1)
- High-field NMR (1)
- Hydrolysis (1)
- Hypersecretion (1)
- IR (1)
- Inorganic ions (1)
- Introduction (1)
- Ions (1)
- Knockout mice (1)
- Levulinic acid (1)
- Lignocellulose (1)
- Lignocellulose feedstook (1)
- Linear discriminant analysis (1)
- Low field NMR (1)
- Manufacturer (1)
- Marker-free mutagenesis (1)
- Mechanical (1)
- Mechanical simulation (1)
- Medical radionuclide production (1)
- Metabolic shift (1)
- Metal contaminants (1)
- Methane (1)
- Microfluidic solvent extraction (1)
- Minor chemistry (1)
- Molecular modelling (1)
- Molecular weight determination (1)
- NMR (1)
- On-site (1)
- Organic acids (1)
- Organic waste (1)
- P2G (1)
- PLS-regression (1)
- Physical chemistry (1)
- Physical chemistry basics (1)
- Physical chemistry starters (1)
- Polysaccharides (1)
- Pre-culture (1)
- Pre-treatment (1)
- Pretreatment (1)
- Process schemes (1)
- Quality control (1)
- Quantum chemistry (1)
- Reconstruction (1)
- Renewable resources (1)
- Simultaneous determination (1)
- Soft independent modeling of class analogy (1)
- Spectroscopy (1)
- Stenotrophomonas maltophilia (1)
- Streptomyces griseus (1)
- Streptomyces lividans (1)
- Thermodynamics as minor (1)
- Toxicology (1)
- USP (1)
- Uracil-phosphoribosyltransferase (1)
- Ureter (1)
- Weak organic acids (1)
- acetoin (1)
- acetoin reductase (1)
- actuator-sensor system (1)
- alcoholic beverages (1)
- aspergillus (1)
- bacterial cellulose (1)
- bi-enzyme biosensor (1)
- bio-methane (1)
- bioavailability (1)
- biodegradable polymers (1)
- biological dosimeter (1)
- biomethane (1)
- biosensors (1)
- borehole disposal (1)
- capacitive field-effect sensor (1)
- capacitive field-effect sensors (1)
- coculture (1)
- deficit irrigation (1)
- detergent protease (1)
- disposal facility (1)
- drug metabolising enzymes (1)
- drug–drug interactions (1)
- elastomers (1)
- enzyme kinetics (1)
- enzyme-logic gate (1)
- exopolysaccharides (1)
- filamentous fungi (1)
- genome engineering (1)
- geological disposal (1)
- glycine (1)
- halotolerant protease (1)
- high-alkaline subtilisin (1)
- human metabolites (1)
- hydrogel (1)
- hydrogels (1)
- light-addressable electrode (1)
- light-addressable potentiometric sensor (1)
- mechanical properties (1)
- microfluidics (1)
- micronutrients (1)
- neutrons (1)
- nuclear waste (1)
- onion (1)
- optical fibers (1)
- oxidative stable protease (1)
- penicillinase (1)
- polyaspartic acid (1)
- power-to-gas (1)
- prebiotic (1)
- proton therapy (1)
- protons (1)
- pullulan (1)
- recombinant expression (1)
- relative dosimetry (1)
- retention time (1)
- rubber (1)
- superabsorbent polymers (1)
- supramolecular structures (1)
- swelling properties (1)
- theory and modeling (1)
- tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (1)
- transporters (1)
- urease (1)
- water economy (1)
- yield (1)
- α-aminoacylase (1)
- ε-lysine acylase (1)
Lately there has been an increasing concern about uranium toxicity in some districts of Punjab State located in the North Western part of India after the publication of a report (Blaurock-Busch et al. 2010) which showed that the concentration of uranium in hair and urine of children suffering from physical deformities, neurological and mental disorder from Malwa region (Fig. 1) of Punjab State was manifold higher than the reference ranges. A train which connects the affected region with the nearby city of Bikaner which has a Cancer Hospital has been nicknamed as Cancer Express due to the frenzy generated on account of uranium related toxicity.
The emerging environmental issues due to the use of fossil resources are encouraging the exploration of new renewable resources. Biomasses are attracting more interest due to the low environmental impacts, low costs, and high availability on earth. In this scenario, green biorefineries are a promising platform in which green biomasses are used as feedstock. Grasses are mainly composed of cellulose and hemicellulose, and lignin is available in a small amount. In this work, a perennial ryegrass was used as feedstock to develop a green bio-refinery platform. Firstly, the grass was mechanically pretreated, thus obtaining a press juice and a press cake fraction. The press juice has high nutritional values and can be employed as part of fermentation media. The press cake can be employed as a substrate either in enzymatic hydrolysis or in solid-state fermentation. The overall aim of this work was to demonstrate different applications of both the liquid and the solid fractions. For this purpose, the filamentous fungus A. niger and the yeast Y. lipolythica were selected for their ability to produce citric acid. Finally, the possibility was assessed to use the press juice as part of fermentation media to cultivate S. cerevisiae and lactic acid bacteria for ethanol and lactic acid fermentation.
Lolium perenne (perennial ryegrass) is aproductive and high-quality forage grass indigenous to Southern Europe, temperate Asia, and North Africa. Nowadays it is widespread and the dominant grass species on green areas in temperate climates. This abundant source of biomass is suitable for the development of bioeconomic processes because of its high cellulose and water-soluble carbohydrate content. In this work, novel breeds of the perennial ryegrass are being examined with regards to their quality parameters and biotechnological utilization options within the context of bioeconomy. Three processing operations are presented. In the first process, the perennial ryegrass is pretreated by pressing or hydrothermal extraction to derive glucosevia subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose. A yield of up to 82 % glucose was achieved when using the hydrothermal ex-traction as pretreatment. In a second process, the ryegrass is used to produce lactic acid in high concentrations. The influence of the growth conditions and the cutting time on the carboxylic acid yield is investigated. A yield of lactic acid of above 150 g kg⁻¹ dry matter was achieved. The third process is to use Lolium perenne as a substrate in the fermentation of K. marxianus for the microbial production of single-cell proteins. The perennial ryegrass is screw-pressed and the press juice is used as medium. When supplementing the press juice with yeast media components, a biomass concentration of up to 16 g L⁻¹ could be achieved.
Several species of (poly)saccharides and organic acids can be found often simultaneously in various biological matrices, e.g., fruits, plant materials, and biological fluids. The analysis of such matrices sometimes represents a challenging task. Using Aloe vera (A. vera) plant materials as an example, the performance of several spectro-scopic methods (80 MHz benchtop NMR, NIR, ATR-FTIR and UV–vis) for the simultaneous analysis of quality parameters of this plant material was compared. The determined parameters include (poly)saccharides such as aloverose, fructose and glucose as well as organic acids (malic, lactic, citric, isocitric, acetic, fumaric, benzoic and sorbic acids). 500 MHz NMR and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) were used as the reference methods.
UV–vis data can be used only for identification of added preservatives (benzoic and sorbic acids) and drying agent (maltodextrin) and semiquantitative analysis of malic acid. NIR and MIR spectroscopies combined with multivariate regression can deliver more informative overview of A. vera extracts being able to additionally quantify glucose, aloverose, citric, isocitric, malic, lactic acids and fructose. Low-field NMR measurements can be used for the quantification of aloverose, glucose, malic, lactic, acetic, and benzoic acids. The benchtop NMR method was successfully validated in terms of robustness, stability, precision, reproducibility and limit of detection (LOD) and quantification (LOQ), respectively. All spectroscopic techniques are useful for the screening of (poly)saccharides and organic acids in plant extracts and should be applied according to its availability as well as information and confidence required for the specific analytical goal. Benchtop NMR spectroscopy seems to be the most feasible solution for quality control of A. vera products.
Access to promising radiometals as isotopes for novel molecular imaging agents requires that they are routinely available and inexpensive to obtain. Proximity to a cyclotron center outfitted with solid target hardware, or to an isotope generator for the metal of interest is necessary, both of which can introduce significant hurdles in development of less common isotopes. Herein, we describe the production of ⁴⁴Sc (t₁⸝₂ = 3.97 h, Eavg,β⁺ = 1.47 MeV, branching ratio = 94.27%) in a solution target and an automated loading system which allows a quick turn-around between different radiometallic isotopes and therefore greatly improves their availability for tracer development. Experimental yields are compared to theoretical calculations.