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Natural Polyphenols from Wood: Tannin and Lignin - An Industrial
Perspective is a detailed guide to the sourcing and processing of
tannin and lignin for valuable advanced applications across areas
such as fuels, chemicals, drugs, and food. Drawing on the latest
academic research and patent literature, this book provides strong
practical understanding of the use of these valuable materials in
novel industrial applications. This book introduces natural
polyphenols from wood and the fundamental aspects of carbon
management within the tree. In-depth presentation of extraction and
characterization methods is followed by an extensive coverage of
practical and industrial applications of wood polyphenols. This is
an essential resource for researchers and advanced students working
with lignin or tannin, and across biopolymer science, biomass, wood
chemistry, paper, wood adhesives, polymer materials, renewable
resources, and biotechnology. It also supports industrial R&D
and scientists working with wood polyphenols or bio-based polymers.
Modeling Chemical Systems using Cellular Automata provides a
practical introduction to an exciting modeling paradigm for complex
systems. The book first discusses the nature of scientific inquiry
using models and simulations, and then describes the nature of
cellular automata models. It then gives detailed descriptions, with
examples and exercises, of how cellular automata models can be used
in the study of a wide variety chemical, physical, and biochemical
phenomena. Topics covered include models of water itself, solution
phenomena, solution interactions with stationary systems, first-
and second-order kinetic phenomena, enzyme kinetics, vapor-liquid
equilibrium, and atomic and molecular excited-state kinetics. The
student experiences these systems through hands-on examples and
guided studies. This book is the first of its kind: a textbook and
a laboratory manual about cellular automata modeling of common
systems in chemistry. The book is designed to be used as a text in
undergraduate courses dealing with complex systems and/or as a
computational supplement to laboratory courses taught at the
undergraduate level. The book includes: - Compact descriptions of a
large variety of physical and chemical phenomena - Illustrative
examples of simulations, with exercises for further study - An
instructor's manual for use of the program The book will be of
great value in undergraduate courses in chemistry, physics,
biology, applied mathematics, and bioinformatics, and as a
supplement for laboratory courses in introductory chemistry,
organic chemistry, physical chemistry, medicinal chemistry,
chemical engineering and other courses dealing with statistical and
dynamic systems. It allows the exploration of a wide range of
dynamic phenomena, many of which are not normally accessible within
conventional laboratory settings due to limitations of time, cost,
and experimental equipment. The book is both a textbook on applied
Cellular Automata and a lab manual for chemistry (physics,
engineering) courses with lab activity. It would supplement other
lab work and be an additonal book the students would use in the
course. The authors have assessed the emerging need for this kind
of activity in science labs because of the cost of the practical
activitites and the frequent failure of some exercises leading to
lost didactic value of some experiments. This book is pioneering an
alternative that will grow in use. There are no course directors
who would use Cellular Automata exclusively. The authors see an
emerging interest in this kind of work in courses that contain lab
exercises. One such course is the graduate course that Lemont Kier
gives in Life Sciences about complexity. He uses many examples and
studies from Cellular Automata in the latter part of this course.
Modeling Chemical Systems using Cellular Automata provides a
practical introduction to an exciting modeling paradigm for complex
systems. The book first discusses the nature of scientific inquiry
using models and simulations, and then describes the nature of
cellular automata models. It then gives detailed descriptions, with
examples and exercises, of how cellular automata models can be used
in the study of a wide variety chemical, physical, and biochemical
phenomena. Topics covered include models of water itself, solution
phenomena, solution interactions with stationary systems, first-
and second-order kinetic phenomena, enzyme kinetics, vapor-liquid
equilibrium, and atomic and molecular excited-state kinetics. The
student experiences these systems through hands-on examples and
guided studies. This book is the first of its kind: a textbook and
a laboratory manual about cellular automata modeling of common
systems in chemistry. The book is designed to be used as a text in
undergraduate courses dealing with complex systems and/or as a
computational supplement to laboratory courses taught at the
undergraduate level. The book includes: - Compact descriptions of a
large variety of physical and chemical phenomena - Illustrative
examples of simulations, with exercises for further study - An
instructor's manual for use of the program The book will be of
great value in undergraduate courses in chemistry, physics,
biology, applied mathematics, and bioinformatics, and as a
supplement for laboratory courses in introductory chemistry,
organic chemistry, physical chemistry, medicinal chemistry,
chemical engineering and other courses dealing with statistical and
dynamic systems. It allows the exploration of a wide range of
dynamic phenomena, many of which are not normally accessible within
conventional laboratory settings due to limitations of time, cost,
and experimental equipment. The book is both a textbook on applied
Cellular Automata and a lab manual for chemistry (physics,
engineering) courses with lab activity. It would supplement other
lab work and be an additonal book the students would use in the
course. The authors have assessed the emerging need for this kind
of activity in science labs because of the cost of the practical
activitites and the frequent failure of some exercises leading to
lost didactic value of some experiments. This book is pioneering an
alternative that will grow in use. There are no course directors
who would use Cellular Automata exclusively. The authors see an
emerging interest in this kind of work in courses that contain lab
exercises. One such course is the graduate course that Lemont Kier
gives in Life Sciences about complexity. He uses many examples and
studies from Cellular Automata in the latter part of this course.
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