Title :
Renewable Raw Materials for advanced applications
Author :
Martin-Luengo, M.A. ; Yates, M. ; Ramos, M. ; Salgado, J.L. ; Aranda, R. M Martin ; Plou, F. ; Sanz, J. López ; Lozano Pirrongelli, R. ; Saez Rojo, E. ; Gonzalez Gil, L. ; Serrano, A. M. Martinez ; Ruiz-Hitzky, E.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of New Archit., Inst. of Mater. Sci. of Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Abstract :
The use of agricultural industrial wastes to obtain value added products is an issue of utmost importance today, since solutions to problems of environmental pollution are crucial in order to achieve a sustainable development. In this respect the contribution of the so called "Renewable Raw Materials" from agricultural wastes can be a promising starting point. Further, given their provenance, these materials can be also considered as "Ecomaterials". This issue is now considered as one of the main scientific goals at an international level, given their benign environmental impact Using waste materials avoids the expense of other often non-renewable materials, among many other benefits, with groups which are working in this philosophy called "cradle to grave" under which industries may be able to turn waste into useful materials for themselves or others, thus closing a cycle with obvious benefits. The renewable raw materials developed in our group are value added materials prepared from agricultural industrial wastes, avoiding the use of toxic substances to the environment, as well as achieving maximum economy and reduction of energy expenditure. Some of the processes developed are: immobilization of enzymes for biocatalytic processes, design of scaffolds for tissue engineering, conversion of liquid renewable raw materials into fine chemical intermediates avoiding the use of petroleum derivatives and catalysts for environmental protection.
Keywords :
agriculture; biotechnology; catalysis; enzymes; industrial waste; raw materials; recycling; renewable materials; sustainable development; waste recovery; agricultural industrial waste; biocatalytic process; energy expenditure; environmental pollution; environmental protection; enzyme immobilization; liquid renewable raw materials; petroleum derivatives; scaffold design; sustainable development; tissue engineering; value added products; waste materials; Silicon compounds; Biorefinery; Ecomaterials; Renewable raw materials; Sustainability; agricultural industrial waste valorisatrion;
Conference_Titel :
Sustainable Technologies (WCST), 2011 World Congress on
Conference_Location :
London
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1311-8