Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Biocompatibility of Synthetic and Bio-Material Fusion


Affiliations
1 School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Central University of Himachal Pradesh, Dharamshala 176 215, India
 

This communication proposes methods to improve the biocompatibility performance of synthetic materials for biological and biological material for synthetic applications. π-cloud extension by suitable ligand- ligand/metal-ligand interactions can make the synthetic-biological fusion suitable for such applications. The judicious use of ligands for π-cloud extension can be applied to carbon transformations and target-oriented drug delivery systems. Embedded metal-centre catalysts for synthetic-biological fusion include: (i) axial coordination via bridging ligands; (ii) ligands with weak to intermediate field strength and multidenticities; (iii) design of inert complexes, and (iv) development of multi-nuclear complexes.

Keywords

Biocompatibility, Carbon Transformation, Drug Delivery, Sequestration, Synthetic–Natural Fusion.
User
Notifications
Font Size

Abstract Views: 284

PDF Views: 119




  • Biocompatibility of Synthetic and Bio-Material Fusion

Abstract Views: 284  |  PDF Views: 119

Authors

Deepak Pant
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Central University of Himachal Pradesh, Dharamshala 176 215, India
Virbala Sharma
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Central University of Himachal Pradesh, Dharamshala 176 215, India

Abstract


This communication proposes methods to improve the biocompatibility performance of synthetic materials for biological and biological material for synthetic applications. π-cloud extension by suitable ligand- ligand/metal-ligand interactions can make the synthetic-biological fusion suitable for such applications. The judicious use of ligands for π-cloud extension can be applied to carbon transformations and target-oriented drug delivery systems. Embedded metal-centre catalysts for synthetic-biological fusion include: (i) axial coordination via bridging ligands; (ii) ligands with weak to intermediate field strength and multidenticities; (iii) design of inert complexes, and (iv) development of multi-nuclear complexes.

Keywords


Biocompatibility, Carbon Transformation, Drug Delivery, Sequestration, Synthetic–Natural Fusion.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv112%2Fi02%2F390-395