-
Biocatalysis and Biocatalyst Defined
Filed under biocatalysis, biocatalystFeb 12A good place to start is with definitions, to provide clarity about our subject.
Biocatalysis can be defined as the use of natural substances, which can be one or more enzymes or cells, living, dormant, or dead, to catalyze a chemical reaction or series of chemical reactions. Thus, biocatalysis includes the one-step enzymatic conversion of fumarate to aspartic acid (a component of the non-caloric sweetener aspartame), the two-step oxidation of ethanol to acetic acid (vinegar can be made this way), and the multi-step brewing of beer (quite likely the oldest example of biocatalysis, with historical records dating back 6000 years!).
A biocatalyst, then, is a natural substance, being an enzyme, cell, or a group of enzymes or cells catalyzing a chemical reaction or series of chemical reactions.
As we add content to this site, we will focus on the biocatalyst products available, their applications, their advantages, and the sources of those biocatalyst products, which may be both companies and academic institutions. We might even get opinionated!
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Links
Recent Articles
- Telling the Renewable Energy Story
- Talking Trash
- “Carbon Capture” Enters the Oxford Dictionary–Along With “Vuvuzela”
- Did We Really Need A Consultant To Tell Us This?
- Green Newsfeed: Latest Green News
- Progress on Making Renewable Rubber
- Catalytic Concrete that Purifies the Air
- Carbon Capture: The Next Wave in Green Investments?
- Green, Earthwise Chemistry
- Fish Falling From the Sky–Again
Categories
- algae (20)
- biocatalysis (38)
- biocatalyst (9)
- Biodegradation (1)
- biodiesel (3)
- biofuels (82)
- Biofuels companies (58)
- biotransformation (6)
- Carbon capture (3)
- cellulosic ethanol (20)
- chiral amines (1)
- DSM (1)
- environment (1)
- Enzymes (8)
- global warming (4)
- green chemistry (4)
- green energy (5)
- green news (2)
- metabolite (1)
- natural phenomenon (1)
- Novozymes (1)
- Pavegen Systems (1)
- Recycle (1)
- Resources (2)
- succinic acid (1)
- synthetic biology (1)
- Uncategorized (3)
- white biotechnology (7)
- World Cup (1)
