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  • Recent research shows effectiveness of biosurfactants - 28/11/2023 Ship deck on the sea showing a fishing net and two canisters with liquid.

    Combating oil spills - biosurfactants can stimulate microbial oil degradation

    Oil spills from drilling platforms and tankers cause environmental pollution and a loss of biodiversity. Researchers at the University of Stuttgart, among others, are now using biosurfactants to improve the management of oil spills: their latest research shows that biosurfactants lead to better microbiological degradation of oil components in seawater compared to conventional dispersants.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/combating-oil-spills-biosurfactants-can-stimulate-microbial-oil-degradation
  • Wasser 3.0: #detect|remove|reuse - 31/10/2023 White-beige plastic lumps on a black sieve.

    How to sustainably remove and recycle microplastics from water

    We all pollute our water with things we use in our everyday lives. In the process, microplastics and micropollutants accumulate in sometimes significant quantities and are difficult to remove. This has increasingly devastating consequences for our health and the environment. Wasser 3.0, a non-profit start-up from Karlsruhe, has declared war on this problem by developing a customisable process to detect, remove and even recycle these pollutants.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/how-sustainably-remove-and-recycle-microplastics-water
  • Press release - 27/07/2023

    Materials Research: Biocatalytic Foams of Tremendous Stability and Activity

    Industrial biocatalysis with enzymes is deemed to be a “game changer” in the development of a sustainable chemical industry. Enzymes can be used to synthesize an impressive range of complex molecules. Researchers of KIT have now developed a new class of materials by producing enzyme foams of tremendous stability and activity. The researchers have already filed a patent application on the process to produce enzyme foams.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/materials-research-biocatalytic-foams-tremendous-stability-and-activity
  • Diatoms as a biorefinery - 05/05/2023 Black and white microscopic image of the diatom cells, in which the lipid bodies are marked in green and a schematic representation of the conversion reaction has been zoomed into one of the cells. At the top of the image, the molecular model of the synthetic catalyst.

    Microalgae: sustainable chemical production in a mini factory

    Renewable raw materials that can be used as alternatives to fossil resources already exist. However, to turn them into everyday products, plant oils and other renewable raw materials not only have to be extracted, but often have to undergo complex chemical processing. Researchers at the University of Konstanz have now converted microalgae cells into tiny refineries to produce and upgrade raw materials, creating a supply of sustainable chemicals.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/microalgae-sustainable-chemical-production-mini-factory
  • Vaccination for plants - 23/01/2023 A vine leaf that begins to turn brown due to drought and heat

    Dialogue instead of a chemical maze – new strategy for sustainable crop protection

    Climate change creates stress. This provides an opportunity for pests to exploit plant weaknesses and reproduce. For the infested plant, this can be catastrophic and often fatal. But instead of continuing to protect harvest yields with toxic substances as before, the transnational DialogProTec project is now taking a completely new approach: researchers want to intervene in the communication between plants and pests to keep them healthy.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/dialogue-instead-chemical-maze-new-strategy-sustainable-crop-protection
  • Press release - 08/12/2022

    Tübingen Environmental Researcher Lars Angenent Receives the Leibniz Prize

    Tübingen biotechnologist Lars Angenent is being awarded the Leibniz Prize by the German Research Foundation (DFG) in appreciation of his outstanding work in the field of environmental biotechnology, it was announced in Bonn on Thursday. The DFG said: “In view of climate change and the resulting need to develop a sustainable food, chemistry and energy economy, his work is highly relevant.”

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/tuebingen-environmental-researcher-lars-angenent-receives-leibniz-prize
  • Press release - 29/09/2022

    Algae as microscopic biorefineries

    Fossil raw materials are limited and not available and extractable everywhere in the world – as we are becoming acutely aware of right now by the example of fossil fuels and rising energy prices. Renewable raw material sources will therefore play an increasingly important role in the future: as energy sources, but ideally also as suppliers of building blocks for more environmentally compatible chemicals and materials.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/algen-als-mikroskopische-bioraffinerien
  • Dossier - 09/02/2015 The photo shows the hands of a scientist rotating a flask with a red liquid.

    Chemical tools for biological applications

    The boundaries between traditional scientific disciplines are becoming less and less distinct. Interdisciplinary cooperation is often required to study complex processes and biomolecular issues. Interdisciplinary cooperation is central to chemical biology.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/dossiers/chemical-tools-for-biological-applications
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