Authors
James H Clark, Vitaly Budarin, Fabien EI Deswarte, Jeffrey JE Hardy, Fran M Kerton, Andrew J Hunt, Rafael Luque, Duncan J Macquarrie, Krzysztof Milkowski, Aitana Rodriguez, Owain Samuel, Stewart J Tavener, Robin J White, Ashley J Wilson
Publication date
2006
Journal
Green chemistry
Volume
8
Issue
10
Pages
853-860
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Description
Research into renewable bioresources at York and elsewhere is demonstrating that by applying green chemical technologies to the transformation of typically low value and widely available biomass feedstocks, including wastes, we can build up new environmentally compatible and sustainable chemicals and materials industries for the 21st century. Current research includes the benign extraction of valuable secondary metabolites from agricultural co-products and other low value biomass, the conversion of nature's primary metabolites into speciality materials and into bioplatform molecules, as well as the green chemical transformations of those platform molecules. Key drivers for the adoption of biorefinery technologies will come from all stages in the chemical product lifecycle (reducing the use of non-renewable fossil resources, cleaner and safer chemical manufacturing, and legislative and consumer …
Total citations
20072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202411132121263230244625183628222119117
Scholar articles