Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Journal | Green Chemistry |
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Date | E-pub ahead of print - 28 Nov 2013 |
Date | Published (current) - 1 Feb 2014 |
Issue number | 2 |
Volume | 16 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Pages (from-to) | 573-584 |
Early online date | 28/11/13 |
Original language | English |
Biorefineries are facilities that process biomass into fuels, power and value-added chemicals and with the increasing population and depleting petroleum reserves they are fast becoming more important to society. The technology required to process a wide variety of biomass types can be highly complex due to potentially unknown, varying or difficult to breakdown chemical structures within them. One of the prospective routes to a successful biorefinery, that can treat a wide range of biomass and produce products with good selectivity, is the use of nanoparticles as heterogeneous catalysts. The potential of nanoparticles to catalyse and modify chemical processes, thereby influencing both the nature of the products and their distribution is seen as highly promising. In this publication, we aim to give an overview of the use of a range of nano-catalysts and nano-enzymatic supports for greener biorefinery processing. Finally, future prospects of greener routes to nanoparticle production and their integration into biomass are discussed.
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