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Microwaves in Chemistry Applications. Fundamentals, Methods and Future Trends. Advances in Green and Sustainable Chemistry

  • Book

  • May 2021
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5204000

Microwaves in Chemistry Applications: Fundamentals, Methods and Future Trends offers a number of benefits over conventional heating technologies, including acceleration of reaction rates, milder reaction conditions, higher chemical yields, lower energy usage and different reaction selectivity, all of which can improve the sustainability of processes. The book provides valuable insights into the underlying chemistry at play in microwave-assisted processes, introducing fundamental concepts, discussing the modeling of reactions in such processes, and also highlighting a range of key methods and applications of microwaves in chemistry for improved sustainability.

Beginning with an introduction to microwave chemistry, Part One discusses foundational principles, equipment and approaches for modeling reactions and assessing the outputs of those models. Methods in microwave chemistry are then the focus of Part Two, with microwave-assisted synthesis, catalysis, reduction and reactions all explored in detail. Part Three reflects on the practical usage of these methods to address specific issues, covering a number of interesting applications.

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Table of Contents

1. Foundational principles of microwave chemistry

2. Microwave equipment for chemistry

3. Modelling and interpreting microwave effects

4. Microwave-assisted synthesis of oxygen and sulphur heterocycles

5. Microwave-assisted synthesis of nitrogen heterocycles

6. Microwave-Assisted Oxidation and Reduction Reactions

7. Microwave-Assisted Enzymatic Reactions

8. Microwave-Assisted Sterilization

9. Microwave-enhanced CVD processes for diamond synthesis

10. Future trends in microwave chemistry and biology

Authors

Aparna Das Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Prince Mohammad Bin Fahd University, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Aparna Das obtained her PhD degree in Material science/nanophysics from?Joseph Fourier University based upon the?work on "Semiconductor Quantum Dots for Opto-chemical Sensor Application� at French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), France. Her postdoctoral experiences include working as a research scientist at the California Nano Systems Institute and Electric Engineering Department, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), USA, and as an experienced researcher at the Nanowiring-Marie Curie Initial Training Network, Georg August Universit�t G�ttingen, Germany. Dr Das's research interests include Computer-assisted Physico-chemical methods, quantum mechanical calculations, interdisciplinary science (Biology, Chemistry, and Physics) for drug development,?computer-aided drug design, microwave applications, photochemical reactions, III-Nitride based chemical sensors, solar cells, optoelectronic devices, synthesis of thin layers and nanostructures including Quantum wells, quantum dots, and nanowires. She is the author of two books and received the young women researcher award, European microscopy society (EMS) outstanding paper awards, and several international fellowships such as the Marie-Curie fellowship, CEA-CNRS research fellowship, and Brain Korea 21 fellowship. Bimal Banik Bimal Krishna Banik is a full professor of the Deanship of Research Development at the Prince Mohammad Bin Fahd University in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. He was a tenured full professor and first president's endowed professor at the University of Texas for many years. He also served as the vice president of the Research & Education Development of the Community Health System of Texas. Professor Banik was awarded $7.25 million in grants from the US NIH and US NCI. Importantly, he published more than 600 peer-reviewed papers and 500 presentation abstracts. Notably, he authored and edited 20 books published by Springer, Springer Nature, Nova, Elsevier, De Gruyter, and CRC. He mentored approximately 300 students, 20 postdoctoral fellows, and 7 PhD research scientists. He advised 28 university faculties and 2 students' organizations that have 1400 students. He chaired 20 symposiums at the American Chemical Society National Meetings and 1 conference at the Nobel Prize Celebration. He served as the editor of 12 journals. He received more than two dozens of national and international awards for teaching, mentoring, advising, public service, overall recognitions, and research.