1st Edition

Molecular Imprinting of Polymers

By Sergey Piletsky Copyright 2006
    220 Pages
    by CRC Press

    220 Pages 116 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    One of Nature’s most important talents is evolutionary development of systems capable of molecular recognition: distinguishing one molecule from another. Molecular recognition is the basis for most biological processes, such as ligandreceptor binding, substrate-enzyme reactions and translation and transcription of the genetic code and is therefore of universal interest. Over the past four decades, researchers have been inspired by Nature to produce biomimetic materials with molecular recognition properties, by design rather than by evolution. A particularly exciting area of biomimetics is Molecular Imprinting, which can be defined as process of template-induced formation of specific recognition sites (binding or catalytic) in a material where the template directs the positioning and orientation of the material’s structural components by a self-assembling mechanism. The material itself could be oligomeric (the typical example is DNA replication process), polymeric (organic MIPs and inorganic imprinted silica gels) or 2-dimensional surface assembly (grafted monolayers). Essentially the current progress in the field of molecular imprinting is a result of fundamental achievements made by more than a hundred groups working in the areas of non-covalent and reversible covalent imprinting. The goal of this title is to capture this momentum and publish a new book that will reflect the current situation in this rapidly evolving technology. Very few of the tens of reviews already published on this subject present a critical analysis of the technological aspects of molecular imprinting. Leaders in this field have been approached with requests to provide their views and analyses of specific areas of design, characterization and application of these polymers. The main body of Molecular Imprinting of Polymers starts with chapters covering polymer design, synthesis, and characterization that are prepared by well-recognized experts such as Andrew Mayes and Natalia Perez-Moral, Claud

    1. MIP Formats for Analytical Applications 2. Bioimprinting 3. The Re-Birth of Molecular Imprinting on Silica 4. Chemical Vapor Deposition of Silica Overlayer Using an Organic Molecule as Template on Metal Oxide Surface: Application to Molecular Sieving Sensor and Adsorbent 5. Molecularly Imprinted Polymers for Mass Sensitive Sensors: From Cells to Viruses and Enzymes 6. A New Generation of Chemical Sensors Based on MIPs 7. Molecularly Imprinted Membranes 8. Recognition of Enantiomers Using Molecularly Imprinted Polymers 9. MIP Catalysts: From Theory to Practice 10. Solid-Phase Extraction on Molecularly Imprinted Polymers: Requirements, Achievements and Future Work 11. Imprinted Polymers in Capillary Electrophoresis and Capillary Electrochromatography 12. Molecularly Imprinted Polymers in Drug Screening 13. MIPs in Biotechnology, Perspective and Reality 14. Business Models for the Commercialisation of MIPs 15. A General Survey of Patents in the Field of Molecularly Imprinted Polymers

    Biography

    Piletsky\, Sergey