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Produktbild: Advanced Molecularly Imprinting Materials

Advanced Molecularly Imprinting Materials

285,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

24.10.2016

Herausgeber

Ashutosh Tiwari + weitere

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

720

Maße (L/B/H)

23,1/15/3,8 cm

Gewicht

1066 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-33629-7

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

24.10.2016

Herausgeber

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

720

Maße (L/B/H)

23,1/15/3,8 cm

Gewicht

1066 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-33629-7

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Advanced Molecularly Imprinting Materials
  • Preface xiii

    Part 1 Strategies of Affinity Materials

    1 Recent Molecularly Imprinted Polymer-based Methods for Sample Preparation 3
    Antonio Martín-Esteban

    1.1 Introduction 3

    1.2 Molecularly Imprinted Solid-phase Extraction 6

    1.3 Molecularly Imprinted Solid-phase Microextraction 14

    1.4 Molecularly Imprinted Stir Bar Sorptive Extraction 17

    1.5 Other Formats 18

    1.6 Conclusions 20

    References 21

    2 A Genuine Combination of Solvent-free Sample Preparation Technique and Molecularly Imprinted Nanomaterials 29
    Santanu Patra, Ekta Roy, Rashmi Madhuri and Prashant K. Sharma

    2.1 Introduction 30

    2.2 Molecularly Imprinted Polymer Modified Fiber for Solid-phase Microextraction 40

    2.3 In-tube Solid-phase Microextraction Technique 55

    2.4 Monolithic Fiber 58

    2.5 Micro-solid-phase Extraction 70

    2.6 Stir-bar Sorptive Extraction 73

    2.7 Conclusion and Future Scope 76

    Acknowledgments 76

    Abbreviations 77

    References 78

    3 Fluorescent Molecularly Imprinted Polymers 89
    Kornelia Gawlitza, Wei Wan, Sabine Wagner and Knut Rurack

    3.1 Introduction 89

    3.2 Classes of Emitters to Endow MIPs with Fluorescence 91

    3.3 Fluorescent Molecularly Imprinted Silica 108

    3.4 Post-imprinting of MIPs 111

    3.5 fMIPs as Labels 113

    3.6 Formats for fMIPs 115

    3.7 Conclusion 119

    References 120

    4 Molecularly Imprinted Polymer-based Micro- and Nanotraps for Solid-phase Extraction 129
    R¿dvan Say, Rüstem Keçili and Arzu Ersöz

    4.1 Introduction 130

    4.2 MIPs as SPE Materials 130

    4.3 Conclusions 149

    References 153

    5 Imprinted Carbonaceous Nanomaterials: A Tiny Looking Big Thing in the Field of Selective and Secific Analysis 165
    Ekta Roy, Santanu Patra, Rashmi Madhuri and Prashant K. Sharma

    5.1 Introduction 166

    5.2 Graphene-modified Imprinted Polymer 179

    5.3 Carbon Nanotubes-modified Imprinted Polymer 190

    5.4 Combination of graphene, CNTs, and MIPs 197

    5.5 Graphene Quantum Dots and/or Carbon Dots 198

    5.6 Fullerene 201

    5.7 Activated carbon 202

    5.8 Conclusions 203

    Acknowledgments 204

    List of abbreviations 204

    References 205

    6 Molecularly Imprinted Materials for Fiber-optic Sensor Platforms 217
    Yavuz Orhan Yaman, Necdet Bäaran, Kübra Karayagiz, Zafer Vatansever, Cengiz Yegin, Önder Haluk Tekbä and Müfrettin Murat Sari

    6.1 Introduction 218

    6.2 Material Aspect: Morphology and Physical Forms of MIPs in FO Sensors 223

    6.3 Molecularly Imprinting Technology for Fiber-optic Sensors 231

    6.4 State-of-the-art Fiber-optic Sensors Applications Using Molecularly Imprinted Materials 268

    6.5 Conclusion 273

    References 274

    Part 2 Rational Design of MIP for Advanced Applications

    7 Molecularly Imprinted Polymer-based Sensors for Biomedical and Environmental Applications 285
    Anca Florea, Oana Hosu, Bianca Ciui and Cecilia Cristea

    7.1 Introduction 285

    7.2 Molecularly Imprinted Polymers for Analytes of Biomedical Interest 296

    7.3 Molecularly Imprinted Polymers for Analytes of Environmental Interest 306

    7.4 Conclusion 314

    Acknowledgments 316

    References 316

    8 Molecularly Imprinted Polymers: The Affinity Adsorbents for Environmental Biotechnology 327
    Bo Mattiasson and Gizem Ertürk

    8.1 Introduction 327

    8.2 Molecularly Imprinted Polymers 329

    8.3 Monomers 329

    8.4 Cross-linking Agents 331

    8.5 Mode of Polymerization 332

    8.6 Cryogels 334

    8.7 Process Technology 336

    8.8 Applications 338

    References 345

    9 Molecular Imprinting Technology for Sensing and Separation in Food Safety 353
    Baran Önal Ulusoy, Mehmet Odabäi and Ne¿e Hayat Aksoy

    9.1 Food Safety 354

    9.2 Food Analysis 355

    9.3 Current Separation Methods Used for Food Safety Purposes 356

    9.4 What Is MIP? 357

    9.5 MIP Applications Used for Food Safety Purposes 359

    References 377

    10 Advanced Imprinted Materials for Virus Monitoring 389
    Zeynep Altintas

    10.1 Introduction 390

    10.2 Virus Imprinting 393

    10.3 Artificial MIP Receptors for Viruses 398

    10.4 Virus Monitoring and Detection Using Biomimetic Sensors 399

    10.5 Virus Imprinting for Separation Technologies 401

    10.6 Conclusions 405

    References 406

    11 Design and Evaluation of Molecularly Imprinted Polymers as Drug Delivery Systems 413
    André Luís Morais Ruela and Gislaine Ribeiro Pereira

    11.1 Introduction 414

    11.2 Synthesis and Characterization of MIPs Intended for Drug Release Using Non-covalent Approaches 418

    11.3 Design and Evaluation of Drug Delivery Systems Based on MIPs 436

    11.4 Conclusions 445

    References 446

    12 Molecularly Imprinted Materials for Controlled Release Systems 455
    Yagmur Yegin, Gökhan Yilmaz, Ömer Karakoç, Cengiz Yegin, Servet Çete, Mustafa Akbulut and Müfrettin Murat Sari

    12.1 Introduction 456

    12.2 Selectivity, Release Mechanism and Functionality of MIPs-based CR Systems 459

    12.3 Molecularly Imprinted Polymers Production for Controlled Release 482

    12.4 Controlled Release Applications Using Molecularly Imprinted Materials-based Controlled Release 491

    12.5 Conclusion 506

    References 507

    13 Molecular Imprinting: The Creation of Biorecognition Imprints on the Biosensor Surfaces 523
    Gizem Ertürk and Bo Mattiasson

    13.1 Introduction 523

    13.2 Molecular Imprinting 524

    13.3 Microcontact Imprinting 525

    13.4 Capacitive Biosensors 529

    13.5 Surface Plasmon Resonance Biosensors 541

    13.6 Concluding Remarks 549

    References 550

    14 Molecular Imprinted Polymers for Sensing of Volatile Organic Compounds in Human Body Odor 561
    Sunil Kr. Jha

    14.1 Introduction 562

    14.2 MIP-QCM Sensor Array Preparation 573

    14.3 Chemical Vapor Sensing 576

    14.4 Analysis Outcomes 603

    14.5 Conclusion 624

    Acknowledgments 624

    References 624

    15 Development of Molecularly Imprinted Polymer-based Microcantilever Sensor System 637
    Meltem Okan and Memed Duman

    15.1 Introduction to Mass Sensors 637

    15.2 Principles of Mass Sensors 640

    15.4 Molecularly Imprinted Polymer Technology 655

    15.5 Molecularly Imprinted Polymer-based QCM Sensors 658

    15.6 Ongoing Studies on Molecularly Imprinted Polymers-based Microcantilevers 661

    Acknowledgments 669

    References 669