Yvonne Armitage
Ciba Specialty Chemicals
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yvonne Armitage.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 1998
Jonathan Hughes; Yvonne Armitage; Kenneth Charles Symes
Rhodococci are ubiquitous in nature and their ability to metabolise a wide range of chemicals, many of which are toxic, has given rise to an increasing number of studies into their diverse use as biocatalysts. Indeed rhodococci have been shown to be especially good at degrading aromatic and aliphatic nitriles and amides and thus they are very useful for waste clean up where these toxic chemicals are present.The use of biocatalysts in the chemical industry has in the main been for the manufacture of high-value fine chemicals, such as pharmaceutical intermediates, though investigations into the use of nitrile hydratase, amidase and nitrilase to convert acrylonitrile into the higher value products acrylamide and acrylic acid have been carried out for a number of years. Acrylamide and acrylic acid are manufactured by chemical processes in vast tonnages annually and they are used to produce polymers for applications such as superabsorbents, dispersants and flocculants. Rhodococci are chosen for use as biocatalysts on an industrial scale for the production of acrylamide and acrylic acid due to their ease of growth to high biomass yields, high specific enzyme activities obtainable, their EFB class 1 status and robustness of the whole cells within chemical reaction systems.Several isolates belonging to the genus Rhodococcus have been shown in our studies to be among the best candidates for acrylic acid preparation from acrylonitrile due to their stability and tolerance to high concentrations of this reactive and disruptive substrate. A critical part of the selection procedure for the best candidates during the screening programme was high purity product with very low residual substrate concentrations, even in the presence of high product concentrations. Additionally the nitrile and amide substrate scavenging ability which enables rhodococci to survive very successfully in the environment leads to the formation of biocatalysts which are suitable for the removal of low concentrations of acrylonitrile and acrylamide in waste streams and for the removal of impurities in manufacturing processes.
Biofutur | 1997
Yvonne Armitage; Jonathan Hughes
An amidase or nitrilase is made by continuous culture under carbon limitation using a carbon source which includes, respectively, either (a) an amide or amide precursor or (b) a nitrile or nitrile precursor. Novel enzymes have particular stability. A novel microorganism is Rhodococcus rhodochrous NCIMB 40756 and is capable of producing a particularly stable amidase. The novel amidase, and the amidase made by the defined process, are effective for converting (meth)acrylamide to ammonium (meth)acrylate, for instance in or after the polymerisation of the acrylamide.
Archive | 1996
Yvonne Armitage; Jonathan Hughes; Neil Andrew Webster
Archive | 1996
Yvonne Armitage; Jonathan Hughes; Neil Andrew Webster
Archive | 2004
Jonathan Hughes; Yvonne Armitage; Jatinder Singh Kullar; Stuart Greenhalgh
Archive | 2006
Kenneth Charles Symes; Simon Andrew Collier; Yvonne Armitage; Rajesh Mistry; Robert Baranyai
Archive | 2004
Yvonne Armitage; Jatinder Singh Kullar
Archive | 1997
Jonathan Hughes; Yvonne Armitage; Kenneth Charles Symes; Anthony Paul Brooke
Archive | 2004
Jonathan Hughes; Yvonne Armitage
Archive | 2009
Yvonne Armitage; Stuart Greenhalgh; Jonathan Hughes; Gary Richardson; Kenneth Charles Symes; アーミテージ,イボンヌ; グリーンハル,スチュアート; シムズ,ケネス・チャールズ; ヒューズ,ジョナサン; リチャードソン,ゲーリー