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Chemosensors: Principles, Strategies, and Applications

ISBN: 978-0-470-59206-9

August 2011

524 pages

Description

A thorough, accessible, and general overview of chemosensors

Providing a comprehensive overview of chemosensors—organic molecules designed to bind and sense small molecules or metal ions—and their applications, Chemosensors: Principles, Strategies, and Applications is an accessible one-stop resource for analysts, clinicians, and graduate students studying advanced chemistry and chemosensing.

Chemosensors function on a molecular level, generating a signal upon binding. The book reviews their synthesis, design, and applications for detecting biological and organic molecules as well as metal ions. The text highlights applications in drug discovery and catalyses that have not been well covered elsewhere.

Covering such topics as molecular recognition, detection methods, design strategies, and important biological issues, the book is broken into four sections that examine intermolecular interactions, strategies in sensor design, detection methods, and case studies in metal, saccharide, and amino acid sensing.

An indispensable source of information for chemical and biomedical experts using sensors, Chemosensors includes case studies to make the material both accessible and understandable to chemists of all backgrounds.

About the Author
BINGHE WANG, PhD, is Professor and Chair of the Department of Chemistry at Georgia State University as well as Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Drug Discovery. He is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Medicinal Research Reviews, series editor for the Wiley Series in Drug Discovery and Development, and coeditor of Drug Delivery: Principles and Applications and Carbohydrate Recognition: Biological Problems, Methods, and Applications, both from Wiley.

ERIC V. ANSLYN, PhD, is the Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry at the University of Texas at Austin. His research interests include physical organic chemistry, molecular recognition, sensor design, and sensor arrays.