2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(367d) Reaction Engineering and Catalysis for Life Science Applications
Author
Similar observations hold for the field of catalysis. New drugs coming to the market are becoming more sophisticated and are larger molecules, which are harder to synthesize on a production scale. In a pharmaceutical synthesis a sequence of 10 to 15 synthetic steps is no exception. If each step of a 10-step synthesis had a 50% selectivity, the overall yield would be 0.510 = 0.001 or a 1/10th of a percent. Thus, highly selective catalytic processes are critical for advanced pharmaceutical syntheses. As a consequence, the importance of catalytic processes for life science applications (e.g., chiral reactions) is steadily increasing, effectively replacing old stoichiometric routes.
In this presentation several of our research efforts in the area of reaction engineering and catalysis for life science applications are presented, including the development of novel controlled immobilization techniques for enzyme, multifunctional enzyme-based micro-reactors for fine chemicals synthesis and therapeutic devices and sensors, as well as effective catalysts for the synthesis of bioactive, chiral molecules.