Illustrative examples of some adsorbents and usual applications.
\\n\\n
These books synthesize perspectives of renowned scientists from the world’s most prestigious institutions - from Fukushima Renewable Energy Institute in Japan to Stanford University in the United States, including Columbia University (US), University of Sidney (AU), University of Miami (USA), Cardiff University (UK), and many others.
\\n\\nThis collaboration embodied the true essence of Open Access by simplifying the approach to OA publishing for Academic editors and authors who contributed their research and allowed the new research to be made available free and open to anyone anywhere in the world.
\\n\\nTo celebrate the 50 books published, we have gathered them at one location - just one click away, so that you can easily browse the subjects of your interest, download the content directly, share it or read online.
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IntechOpen and Knowledge Unlatched formed a partnership to support researchers working in engineering sciences by enabling an easier approach to publishing Open Access content. Using the Knowledge Unlatched crowdfunding model to raise the publishing costs through libraries around the world, Open Access Publishing Fee (OAPF) was not required from the authors.
\n\nInitially, the partnership supported engineering research, but it soon grew to include physical and life sciences, attracting more researchers to the advantages of Open Access publishing.
\n\n\n\nThese books synthesize perspectives of renowned scientists from the world’s most prestigious institutions - from Fukushima Renewable Energy Institute in Japan to Stanford University in the United States, including Columbia University (US), University of Sidney (AU), University of Miami (USA), Cardiff University (UK), and many others.
\n\nThis collaboration embodied the true essence of Open Access by simplifying the approach to OA publishing for Academic editors and authors who contributed their research and allowed the new research to be made available free and open to anyone anywhere in the world.
\n\nTo celebrate the 50 books published, we have gathered them at one location - just one click away, so that you can easily browse the subjects of your interest, download the content directly, share it or read online.
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The size miniature brings unique properties to nanowires due to quantum confinement. The large surface-to-volume ratio renders nanowires with high sensitivity to surface effects. The unique geometrical advantages and properties facilitate the utilization of nanowires in nano-electronics. \nInTech scientific publisher has initialized a series of books focusing on fundamental research in nanowires, which largely boosted the widespread of knowledge among the research society. This book is intended to provide an updated review on the applications of various nanowires and the associated advancements in synthesis and properties characterization. The topics include recent progress in metal oxide nanowires, silicon nanowires, carbon based nanotubes and nanowires.",isbn:null,printIsbn:"978-953-51-0898-6",pdfIsbn:"978-953-51-4260-7",doi:"10.5772/3367",price:139,priceEur:155,priceUsd:179,slug:"nanowires-recent-advances",numberOfPages:436,isOpenForSubmission:!1,isInWos:1,isInBkci:!0,hash:"5c6a1098e69cd1ff0fd11e0d8b702b06",bookSignature:"Xihong Peng",publishedDate:"December 19th 2012",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/3066.jpg",numberOfDownloads:57805,numberOfWosCitations:120,numberOfCrossrefCitations:57,numberOfCrossrefCitationsByBook:5,numberOfDimensionsCitations:128,numberOfDimensionsCitationsByBook:7,hasAltmetrics:1,numberOfTotalCitations:305,isAvailableForWebshopOrdering:!0,dateEndFirstStepPublish:"March 1st 2012",dateEndSecondStepPublish:"March 22nd 2012",dateEndThirdStepPublish:"June 18th 2012",dateEndFourthStepPublish:"July 18th 2012",dateEndFifthStepPublish:"October 17th 2012",currentStepOfPublishingProcess:5,indexedIn:"1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8",editedByType:"Edited by",kuFlag:!1,featuredMarkup:null,editors:[{id:"24647",title:"Prof.",name:"Xihong",middleName:null,surname:"Peng",slug:"xihong-peng",fullName:"Xihong Peng",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/24647/images/system/24647.png",biography:"Dr. Xihong Peng is a professor in the College of Integrative Sciences and Arts, Arizona State University (ASU), Polytechnic Campus. She received a Ph.D. in Physics from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, New York, in 2007. She joined ASU as an assistant professor in 2008 and was promoted to professor in 2021. \n\nDr. Peng’s research interests are to explore novel materials and seek their applications in nanoelectronics and alternative energies, as well as to gain a fundamental understanding of the materials’ properties at an atomic level. 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Recent Advances, New Perspectives and Applications",subtitle:null,reviewType:"peer-reviewed",abstract:"
\r\n\tIn mathematics, operator theory is the study of linear operators on function spaces, beginning with differential operators and integral operators. The operators may be presented abstractly by their characteristics, such as bounded linear operators or closed operators and consideration may be given to nonlinear operators. The study, which depends heavily on the topology of function spaces, is a branch of functional analysis. If a collection of operators forms an algebra over a field, then it is an operator algebra. The description of operator algebras is part of operator theory. Single operator theory deals with the properties and classification of operators, considered one at a time. For example, the classification of normal operators in terms of their spectra falls into this category.
\r\n\r\n\tThe theory of operator algebras brings algebras of operators such as C*-algebras to the fore. Many operators that are studied are operators on Hilbert spaces of holomorphic functions, and the study of the operator is intimately linked to questions in function theory. For example, Beurling's theorem describes the invariant subspaces of the unilateral shift in terms of inner functions, which are bounded holomorphic functions on the unit disk with unimodular boundary values almost everywhere on the circle. Beurling interpreted the unilateral shift as multiplication by the independent variable on the Hardy space. The success in studying multiplication operators, and more generally Toeplitz operators (which are multiplication, followed by projection onto the Hardy space) has inspired the study of similar questions in other spaces, such as the Bergman space. Hence, operator theory has a connection with complex analysis. Additionally, this book will be intended to be an illustration of the use of operator theory when applied to solve specific problems in pure and applied mathematics, engineering, physics, or science in general.
\r\n\t
Gas chromatography (GC) is a common and a complex analytical technique involving the separation of different types of gas or molecules easily vaporized without decomposition. The gas molecules are carried through the column using a carrier gas, typically nitrogen or helium. Based on their affinity for the coating material inside the column which is called the “stationary phase,” molecules are separated based on certain molecular characteristics such as their molecular weight, polarity, and presence of certain functional groups. At the end of the column, molecules are separated and detected by a detector.
Commercially available GC analyzers use conventionally manufactured components (~30 kg) and need power and gas sources that often limit their portability and suitability of “outside-laboratory” use. Miniaturization of GC is based on theoretical and practical considerations. This chapter describes the miniaturization of analytical system, in order to give a complete view of miniaturized chromatographic separations.
Conventional GCs provide accurate analysis of complex mixtures but at the cost of using large, power-hungry, and relatively expensive table-top instruments. Usually, samples are collected and brought back to the laboratory for analysis. On-site analysis is becoming increasingly important, especially in the area of environmental monitoring. It reduces the risk of contamination, sample loss, and sample decomposition during transport. Furthermore, on-site monitoring also results in much shorter analysis turnaround times and thus allows for faster response to the analytical results. Lightweight devices with low maintenance are needed. In order to achieve these features, the miniaturization of the main components of GCs is performed.
Miniaturization of GC is based both on theoretical and practical considerations [1]. Theory predicts that reducing the dimensions of flow channels enhances the analytical performances. In practice, miniaturization also enhances analysis of small-volume samples and increases analysis speed. A microfabricated GC system requires a number of components to function properly: preconcentrator, micro-valves for injecting the sample into the carrier gas, microfabricated columns well-functionalized for the specific use, heaters and temperature sensors for controlling column temperature, and detector(s) for detecting the arrival of different types of molecules. Temperature stability is also critical for GC operation, as the adsorption/desorption processes responsible for molecular separation in the column are very sensitive to temperature. The issues of microfluidic integration are therefore critical in GC microsystems.
Despite the fact that the first work on microchip-based chromatographic system was a miniaturized gas chromatograph in 1979 [2] using microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), this development was hardly pursued afterward, probably because the analytical community was not yet ready to embrace this new technology.
The injector is a device used for introducing liquid or gas samples into the gas chromatograph. The sample is introduced directly into the carrier gas stream via a temperature-controlled chamber temporarily isolated from the system by gas sampling valves. Among all reported studies, several research teams have used commercial injectors (part of a convention GC) in split mode or gas sample valves to introduce samples into the micro-columns. Some other teams designed and fabricated a chip-based preconcentrator instead of an injector to increase sensitivity and selectivity when solute concentration is below detection limit of the detector [3, 4]. In both cases, the device must be capable of generating sharp injection plugs.
A six-valve MEMS-based injector with constant 250 nL of sample volume and suitable for harsh environment was introduced in 2010 emulating Valvo® six-valve injector. Each valve is made from sandwiching polyether ether ketone (PEEK) membranes between silicon substrate and glass. The six valves opened and closed by changing the pressure through their actuation holes. In sampling mode, valves A, D, and E are closed, while for injecting samples onto separation channels, valves B, C, and F are closed (Figure 1) [5, 6]. Moreover, a customized volume injector (0.5–15 μL) was designed by Holland et al. [7].
Left: Illustration of the MEMS injector in loading and injecting modes, adapted from [
As a general definition, the preconcentrator relies on an adsorbing material deposited on the active area adjacent to the heating element [8]. Ideally, the sorptive material must adsorb selectively one or more chemical species of interest over a time period necessary to concentrate the chemical compound in the adsorptive material. Then, the sorptive layer must be heated with a pulse of temperature for providing narrow desorption peaks with relatively high concentration to the connecting sensor or detector. This process must allow the analytes present in a large air volume to be purified and concentrated, so increasing the efficiency of detection. Since the first micro-machined preconcentrator designed by the ChemLab at Sandia National Laboratories in 1999 [9], many works have been carried out. In literature, different preconcentrating microstructures are now available in different designs and are combined with a wide range of adsorbents [10, 11, 12].
The optimization of the device performance (adsorption and desorption duration and flow rates, heating rates) is rather important for achieving a high preconcentration factor. A compromise must be then established between a suitable adsorbent, low power consumption, and simple fabrication technology.
The gas chromatographic column is considered the “heart” in a gas chromatograph. Over the last three decades, the nature and design of the column have changed considerably. Conventional GCs are equipped with conventional columns: a silica or stainless steel tube containing an immobilized or a cross-linked stationary phase bound to the inner surface. Terry et al. [2] were the first group to introduce “miniaturized GC” and “planar column” concepts by etching channels into a substrate rather by using capillaries of conventional GC technology (Figure 1). However, this groundbreaking work had not led to further developments of related skills or technology until the early 1990s.
Silicon is a very common substrate for microelectronics. The material is relatively inexpensive, is abundant in nature, and can be ordered with well-controlled crystal orientation, thickness, and surface roughness. A large number of processes have been developed over the past 50 years, giving the microsystem designer a wide range of options from which to choose.
Glass, via its optical and mechanical properties, is very interesting to be included in MEMS devices. Additionally, glass can be customized by adding additives to improve some properties, boron oxides, to produce Pyrex well known to its low thermal expansion or sodium to easily to bond with silicon.
The combination of glass and silicon provides the most versatile fabrication technique for producing GC columns (Figure 2). However, silicon and glass fabrication requires the use of a clean room, making this technology relatively expensive and not within the reach of every academic laboratory. Fabrication processes for both glass and silicon can be divided into three main steps: patterning, etching, and bonding.
Illustrating steps to obtain a MEMS column.
Many processes involve the deposition and patterning of thin films (e.g., for heating or as a stationary phase) [13, 14]. There is a wide variety of methods for performing such depositions, from nano- to microscale, such as physical vapor deposition (PVD), sputtering [15, 16], and atomic layer deposition (ALD).
Theoretical plate number N defines the efficiency of the column or sharpness of peaks. The concept of plate theory was originally proposed for the performance of distillation columns. It is proportional to the square root of the retention time and inversed proportional to the peak width following the normal distribution law. The theory assumes that the column is divided into a number of zones called “theoretical plates.” Moreover, the zone thickness is considered as height equivalent to a theoretical plate (H or HEPT):
where
The fundamental equation underlying the performance of a gas chromatographic column is the Van Deemter equation expressed as
where H is the height equivalent to a theoretical plate, A is the eddy diffusion or multiple path term, B is the longitudinal diffusion contribution, C is the resistance to mass transfer term,
Thus, equation is simplified in case of open columns. The A term is equal to zero because there is no packing. This abbreviated expression is often referred to as the
The profile of “H” versus “u” graphic goes through a minimum value of “H” where the efficiency is greatest. This minimum is reached at different carrier gas velocities depending on the nature of the carrier gas. For example, speed of analysis must be sacrificed when nitrogen is used as a carrier gas. On the other hand, if one is willing to save time with slight loss of the efficiency, helium or hydrogen can be used. Additionally, efficiency varies slightly for hydrogen than helium as velocity increases. Finally, the use of hydrogen for any application in the laboratory always requires safety precautions in the event of leak:
The flow rate, and consequently the linear velocity, through smaller columns is difficult to measure accurately and reproducibly by conventional apparatus. Linear velocity may be calculated, through a column of length L, by injecting a volatile, non-retained solute and noting its retention time
In gas chromatography, when the temperature increases, linear velocity decreases because of increased viscosity of the carrier gas.
Van Deemter curve is fitted under isothermal conditions.
It is quite straightforward to etch channels into silicon or glass chip. However, finding a comprehensive and reproducible method of fabrication enabling incorporation of a stationary phase inside the channel under conditions of extreme miniaturization, and production under clean room conditions, was a major challenge. This part covers various functionalization methods from classic coating to unusual MEMS-based techniques.
In the beginning of the MEMS-based column era, researchers tried to adjust expertise gained from the preparation of conventional columns. Usually, columns are made by etching silica substrate followed by capping with Pyrex. Stationary phase application after sealing the channel was usually performed by liquid coating using static or dynamic method. These methods led to wall-coated open tubular MEMS (WCOT-MEMS) columns commonly named “open columns.” The goal in coating is the uniform deposition of a thin film, typically ranging from 0.1 to 10 μm in thickness. To reach this, two varieties of coating exists: static and dynamic.
Polysiloxanes are the most widely used as stationary phases for both conventional and MEMS columns. They offer high solute diffusivities coupled with excellent chemical and thermal stabilities. Additionally, because a variety of functional groups can be incorporated into their structures, polysiloxanes exhibit a wide range of polarities. Since many polysiloxanes are viscous gums and, as such, coat well on MEMS columns. Polysiloxanes are easily cross-linked to be used as stationary phases. The basic structure of 100% dimethylpolysiloxane (PDMS) is depicted in Figure 3.
Chemical structure of basic dimethylpolysiloxane PDMS (left), and substituted polysiloxane.
Lambertus et al. [18] reported a 3-m-long square-spiral MEMS column dynamically coated with PDMS achieving 8200 plates (Figure 4). Moreover, non-treated surface gave 1500 plates more than treated (CVD oxidation prior to bonding).
Left: (a) entire chip; (b) SEM image detail of gas flow (c) detail of etched-channel, right: Isothermal chromatograms at 22°C of the 20-component using channels coated with the nonpolar (a) and the moderately polar (b) stationary phases, reprinted with permission from [
Nishino et al. [19] developed circular, 8.5–17.0-m-long MEMS columns to separate a mixture of 13 compounds which included polar and nonpolar compounds. Before coating with the liquid phase, deactivation treatment to reduce adsorption sites causing peak tailing or peak disappearance was completed. Stationary phase coating was performed by a static method with 5% phenyl 95% dimethylpolysiloxane to give a 0.25-μm-thick film.
Radadia et al. [20] improved separation of organophosphonate and organosulfur compounds by using a 3 m MEMS column coated with 0.25 μm OV-5 as stationary phase. To reduce Pyrex’s active sites, they were deactivated by the use of a variety of agents. Organosilicon hydride deactivation reduced micro-column adsorption activity more than silazane and silane treatment, enabling baseline separation of nine compounds as peaks with very low asymmetry in 2 min and providing 5500 theoretical plates/m (Figure 5).
Left: (A) photograph of the MEMS column, (B) SEM of channels, (C) manifold packaging, and (D) connection to the micro-column. Right: Separation of test, reprinted with permission from [
The most widely used non-silicon-containing stationary phases are the polyethylene glycols. They are commercially available in a wide range of molecular weights under several designations, such as Carbowax 20M and Superox-4. Unfortunately, their operational temperature is reduced compared to siloxane-based polymers. In addition, trace levels of oxygen and water from the sample or the carrier gas have adverse effects especially with Carbowax 20M leading to their fast degradation. An example of a MEMS-based column coated with Carbowax 20M was reporter by Lee et al. [21].
A packed column refers to a column packed with either a solid adsorbent or solid support coated with a liquid phase. However, stable and reproducible performances depend mainly on the quality of packing. In conventional GC, this kind of column began to decline since 1979 by the apparition of capillary fused-silica columns. A packed column consists of three basic components: tubing in which packing material is placed (Table 1), packing retainers (such as glass wool plugs), and the packing material itself. In MEMS-based columns, tubes are replaced by MEMS channels and glass wool plugs by grids or meshes (Figure 6) [22].
Stationary phase | Usual applications |
---|---|
Alumina | Alkanes, alkenes, alkines, aromatic hydrocarbons (C1-C10) |
Silica gel | Hydrocarbons (C1-C4), inorganic gases, volatile ethers |
Carbon | Inorganic gases, hydrocarbons (C1-C5) |
Carbon molecular sieves | Oxygenated compounds (C1-C6) |
Molecular sieves (5X, 13 X) | Hydrogen, oxygen, methane, permanent gas, halocarbons |
Illustrative examples of some adsorbents and usual applications.
Left: Photograph of different components of miniaturized GC, right: Stainless steel meshes to keep the stationary phase particles in the column, adapted from [
Some separations require the use of packed columns: permanent gases, unsaturated isomers of light hydrocarbons, and standardized methods (ASTM E260, NF ISO 17494, etc.) [23]. Although these columns remain effective, their implementation in reduced sizes, low efficiency, and the pressure generated in the column are the main obstacles to their use.
Soon after their discovery in 1991 [24], carbon nanotubes (CNTs) received much attention because of their unique geometry, chemical stability, and high surface-to-volume ratio. Stadermann et al. [25] successfully used single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) as a stationary phase by means of CVD in a microfabricated GC column (Figure 7). Following on from their study, the team developed a new process to produce a highly uniform mat of CNT stationary phase [26].
Left up: SEM image of the old CVD process to produce SWCNTS, left down: SEM image of the new CVD process lead to obtain a “mat” of SWCNTs, right: Separation chromatogram of n-alkanes with SWCNTs, reprinted with permission from [
SWCNTs demonstrate a good ability to be used as stationary phase in gas chromatography to separate alkanes and other analytes. It can be used as is, and no functionalization is required. However, their performance is limited by the fabrication difficulty. CNTs are deposited only on three sides of the column’s channel (silicon) leading to peaks broadening. Additionally, columns with CNTs suffer from poor separation of high-boiling compounds, which is often attributed to the thickness of the CNT layer.
Sputtering is widely used in electronics for deposition of metals and dielectrics. Vial et al. [15] use this technique to provide solid and porous stationary phase. By varying the duration of the sputtering process, sputtered silica layers of different thicknesses were produced. For example, silica layer having 0.75 μm thickness produced 2500 theoretical plates for hydrocarbon separation (Figure 8). At the opposite, producing a thicker layer leads to loss separation efficiency (number of plates). To overcome this, the same group used a semi-packed column with high aspect-to-ratio pillars [13].
Left: Fast separation of linear hydrocarbons with a silica sputtered MEMS column, middle: Micro-pillars covered with sputtered silica, right: SEM picture of graphite-sputtered layer deposited on the inner wall of a micromachied column, reprinted with permission from [
In that case separations were greatly improved because retention increased and efficiency was close to 5000 theoretical plates m−1. The same group tested various targets such as graphite and alumina to separate light hydrocarbons [13, 16]. However, alumina requires a tedious activation step before using.
In the separation sciences, nanoparticles have been used as stationary phases to provide high separation efficiency for a variety of analytes. Because the nanoparticles are too small to be packed into the column, they are usually used as pseudo-stationary phase to enhance separation [27, 28]. Gold nanoparticles have become increasingly popular because of their long-term stability, high surface-to-volume ratio, and ease of chemical modification. The use of gold enables a variety of functional groups to be incorporated into the monolayer [29].
Agah’s group introduced in 2010 a new stationary phase based on deposing gold by electroplating followed by its functionalization [30, 31]. The thickness and the regularity of the layer are customized by varying the current density. Additionally, they used a multi-capillary microfabricated 25 cm column to separate hydrocarbons yielding 20,000 plates m−1 (Figure 9).
Left: Cross-section of a single side-wall with zoom (thickness of the gold layer, middle and right: Thiol deposition using single and double doping methods respectively, adapted from [
Although such results were promising, a disadvantage is that nonselective deposition meant that the fabrication process required “mechanical” removal of gold from the upper surface. This step could damage the very thin fluidic channels. To resolve this problem, Shakeel et al. [32] proposed two different ways, highly reproducible, for the deposition of gold:
Self-patterning gold on the vertical sidewalls only (varying electroplating conditions)
Double-doped self-patterning to cover the interior surfaces of the channel (three silicon sides)
The use of gold stationary phases has furnished interesting results. However, uniformity and quality of deposition depend on the deposition conditions. Additionally, this stationary phase is not suitable for light hydrocarbons separation.
Ionic liquids constitute a group of organic salts with a particulate specification. They are liquid below 100°C and consequently liquids at room temperature. Ionic liquids are polar, nonflammable, chemically inert, thermally stable, easy to synthesize, and already used in conventional gas chromatography [33, 34]. Additionally, their selectivity can be tuned by altering the constituent cation or anion, and hence there is more than 300 commercially varieties.
Zellers’ group [35] was the first team to use ionic liquids in miniaturized gas chromatography by coating a rectangular column as a second dimension in a GC × GC system. Two years after, Agah’s group [36] successes integration of ionic liquids for high-performance separation of complex chemical mixtures (Figure 10).
Left: Separation of a 15-compound mixture using (a) [P66614][NTf2]- and (b) [BPyr][NTf2]-coated columns, right: Up schematic diagram of the measurement setup, right down optical micrographs of the uncoated micro-column.
Ionic liquids can be easily statically or dynamically coated (immobilized). However, two points should be highlighted:
Due to the vast number of ionic liquids, no correlation between the stationary phase and the group of analytes to be separated is known.
Like normal polymer coating, homogeneity of the coating is not systematically reported. Moreover, no one can be sure that the coating thickness is homogeny along the column.
In conventional gas chromatography, used columns are tubes functionalized by a stationary phase having length ranging from 10 to 100 m. To obtain an excellent column, few parameters can be optimized: length, inner diameter, film thickness, and the coiling radius [37]. Theory of chromatography predicts an increase of efficiency, while the diameter of a capillary column decreases. However, with the emerging of “planar columns,” other parameters appear (Figure 11).
Illustration of some geometrical parameters related to MEMS columns.
The effect of microfabricated columns’ geometries on separation performance was compared by Radadia et al. [38]. In fact, three configurations were tested under isothermal and temperature-programmed mode: serpentine, circular-spiral, and square-spiral (Figure 12). Although all the geometries have similar gas permeability, it is shown that the serpentine columns show higher separation plate numbers (lower band broadening) for retained solutes in isothermal mode of operation compared to circular- or square-spiral configurations. Additionally, in temperature-programmed mode of operation, the serpentine design yields higher separation numbers (peak-to-peak resolution) compared to spiral configurations. These performances were attributed to the more favorable hydrodynamic flow.
Left: Photograph showing three different micro-column (a) serpentine, (B) circular-spiral, and (C) square-spiral. Adapted from [
To increase the efficiency and the surface-to-volume and the loadability without scarifying inlet pressure, a new class of gas chromatographic column was introduced in 2009 by Agah’s group [39]. This “semi-packed” column contains embedded 20 μm square posts along the length of the channel paced at 30 μm (Figure 12).” This novel configuration enhances both the sample capacity and the separation efficiency compared to the open rectangular columns. Furthermore, due to the uniform spacing and distribution of the posts, these columns have lower-pressure drops and eddy diffusion as compared to conventional packed columns.
Among the shape of the column and implemented pillars or none, some researchers tried different layouts including width modulation [40], multi-capillary [41], and partially buried channel [42].
The major goal of GC method development is to minimize the analysis time with desired resolution for accurate qualitative and quantitative analysis. Additionally, fast analysis time means also bring the system back to its initial state (for another cycle). For conventional GC, the column is placed inside an oven and heated using a bare resistive metal wire positioned at the back of the oven. Heating rate for the entire GC analysis is between 30 and 60°C/min when cooling down after running a sample takes approximately 5 minutes. Slow heating and cooling are due mainly to the large total thermal mass of the oven making it unsuitable for separations in fast GC.
Microfabricated columns hold a promise for field applications, as they feature fast analysis time, low power consumption, and easy portability. Although the conventional oven has often been used to evaluate to MEMS column performance, heating element is directly incorporated on this plan columns. Because of the high thermal conductivity of silicon, localized heaters are usually deposited on that side to achieve reasonably uniform temperatures across the silicon chip (Figure 13).
Examples of various deposited platinum resistance for sensing and heating the column, adapted from [
Patterned resistive metal layers can be deposited on the surfaces of column substrates to form robust micro-heaters with good thermal conduction, wide temperature range, and extremely low thermal mass. Deposition is performed by various methods such as sputtering or CVD. The resistance temperature detector (RTD) is one of the most accurate temperature sensors. Not only does it provide good accuracy, but it also provides excellent stability and repeatability. Platinum (Pt) is often used in RTDs, and the thin metal film can also function as the heater and temperature sensor simultaneously, which is advantageous for system integration compared to external heaters [13, 43].
Instead of using only platinum as metallic resistance, deposition of various metals was reported: chromium/gold film (Cr/Au) or titanium/platinum (Ti/Pt). Intimate contact between the heater and the column allows extremely high heating rates (1500°C/s) [44]. Depending on the thickness and size of the chip, a heating power consumption can be as low as 4 W/m.
In gas chromatography, separations are performed by temperature programming starting from lower to upper. For continuous monitoring or on-site analysis, GC system should be cooled to the initial state to start a new cycle. Peltier coolers are widely used in miniaturized GC. Also, the column can be set at sub-ambient temperature to retain volatile compounds, for example. This is an advantage compared to conventional GC systems which require liquid carbon dioxide or nitrogen.
After separating the compounds, a detector is used to monitor the outlet stream from the column. Detection in analytical microsystems is a subject of paramount importance. Indeed, detection has been one of the main challenges for analytical microsystems, since very sensitive techniques are needed as a consequence of the ultrasmall sample volumes used in micron-sized environments.
The flame ionization detector (FID) is the most popular and widely used detector for the analysis of trace levels of organic compounds. Its success is based on outstanding properties, such as a very low minimum detectable limit, a high sensitivity, and a broad linear measurement range. Kuper’s team works on miniaturized planar FID since 2000 where the oxygen-hydrogen flame burns inside a glass-silicon chip (Figure 14) [45].
Left: Photography of a micro-FID on a PCB adapted from [
At the opposite of FID, thermal conductivity detector (TCD) is a nondestructive system. It measures the difference in thermal conductivity between pure carrier gas and the carrier gas contaminated with the sample components. Miniaturization of TCD started with the first micro-GC in 1979, and since then several studies have been published in this area [46, 47].
Many sensors such as chemiresistor array and metal oxide (MOX) sensors have been reported for chip-based GC. The response mechanism of these sensors mainly relies on the impedance changes. Typically, a chemiresistor consists of a conductive or semiconductive polymer or emulsion and organometallic compounds [48, 49].
The development of MEMS gas chromatographic components is in progress at several laboratories and universities. Some characteristics of miniaturized GCs are listed in Table 2.
Features→↓reference | Sampling and injection | Separation | Detection | Products to be separated |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sandia National Laboratories [51] (2004–2010) | MEMS cavities | MEMS spiral columns coated with PDMS, WAX, etc. | Chemiresistor, surface acoustic wave | C5–C12 polar and nonpolar compounds (hydrogen*) |
μGC system CNR-IMM [52] (2009) | MEMS cavity filled with quinoxaline | 0.5 m square-spiral column, packed with Carbograph | Metal-oxide semiconductor | Benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes (ambient air*) |
μGC system Arizona State University [53] (2013) | Stainless steel tube packed with Carbopack | 2–19 m commercial columns | Quartz crystal fork detector with imprinted polymer (MIP) | Benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes (ambient air*) |
Intrepid GC University of Michigan WIMS [54] (2013) | Combination of stainless steel tube and MEMS elements | 1 m MEMS column (PDMS coating) | Chemiresistor array | Explosives vapors (ambient air*) |
Zebra GC system Virginia Tech [55] (2015) | MES cavity with embedded pillars (Tenax TA coating) | 2 m MEMS column (PDMS coating) | μTCD embedded in the column | Benzene, toluene, tetrachloroethylene, chlorobenzene (helium*) |
μGC system University of Michigan WIMS [56] (2016) | MEMS cavity filled with Carbopack | 10 m commercial column | Homemade PID | 26 VOCs (helium cartridge*) |
Comparison of some portable GC systems.
carrier gas.
At this stage, microfabrication is an attractive option for the development of greatly improved instruments, and many investigations have been reported. However, there are no portable devices able to work anywhere, making accurate, automatic, and continuous analyses of gas samples.
C2V Company released its first commercial micro-GC product (model C2V-200) in 2010. The platform, based on cartridges, allows hybrid integration of components such as sensors and valves to be assembled together with reduced dead volume. Integrated microchip technology combined with narrow bore capillary GC columns results in a higher performance for lower costs. The C2V-200 micro-GC is designed for ease of use, reduced maintenance, and low gas consumption. Exchangeable column cartridges, with integrated heating zones, can be easily installed (up to 4) with a different column and detection method. This modular setup allows the ability to monitor a wider spectrum of gas components in the same timeframe of 10 to 60 seconds [50].
The concept of micro-gas chromatographs demonstrates the potential of mobile devices in various fields related to analytical chemistry such as oil and gas, air analyses, defense, food processing industry, etc. New instrument designs and component manufacturing methods are coming on line that will result in the development of a new generation of high-performance, moveable, and miniaturized instruments for high-performance gas chromatography (HP-GC). The use of microelectromechanical system technologies for the manufacturing of microfabricated gas chromatographic components results in very small, autonomous, and low-cost instruments. Completely autonomous GC instruments require no daily maintenance and can be placed in remote locations for long-term service. This requires battery operation, wireless communications, and freedom from tanks of compressed gases. To this end, work is in progress to develop a high-performance micro-GC that will have acceptable volume. To achieve complete autonomy, vacuum outlet GC should be used with ambient air as carrier gas. In addition, remote battery charging with radiofrequency transmission will be feasible. The use of ambient air as a carrier gas poses several challenges. First, some stationary phases rapidly decompose in air. Poly(ethylene glycol) is a good example. In addition, particulate material and water vapor may need to be removed. Sensor array detection also is needed because these devices can be microfabricated with very low dead volumes; they require no support gases for their operation, and they can be fabricated with a variety of selectivities, which can be used for vapor recognition and for the deconvolution of overlapping peaks. This can reduce the resolution requirements for the column. Sensors and detectors usually have lower sensitivity than detectors incorporated in laboratory gas chromatographic instruments. Low detector sensitivity, coupled with the very low concentrations often associated with air monitoring, requires the use of a preconcentrator for sample enrichment prior to separation and detection. More energy is then needed to heat the preconcentrator to release the adsorbed sample. It seems that one way to solve these problems is a future integration of the instrument on a single chip, focusing each device to one field of application instead to make universal apparatus emulating conventional gas chromatographs.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Achieving wellness and hence well-being is the goal of every human being. On the global scale this is articulated through the Millennium Development Goal and SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals) of the United Nations.
The science of medical and healthcare has transformed the healthcare profession by the extraordinary revolution in information technology. To utilize the true results of science, the use and accessibility of information among different healthcare professionals through network neutrality realize the true human healthcare, bringing the world together as a true global village.
It is believed that the better access by ICT will improve information barrier-free, grassroots information dissemination, and information sharing. Better human healthcare will be achieved by increasing the accessibility of healthcare information. While this optimism is believed, real-world healthcare has been severely affected by the shared information among the healthcare industries, professionals, and academia.
If information is not transmitted correctly without distorting the truth, life-threatening situations occur frequently. However, healthcare is usually neglected because it is only demanded when a person becomes unhealthy. Therefore, the supplier can behave to get the best benefit from diseases. What’s worse is that the higher the need, the more urgent it is.
Due to the above circumstances, the healthcare provider is likely to take self-interest behavior. To curb such behavior, better access to information does not solve the problem. This is because the information is cleverly rewritten to suit the interest of mainstream in the healthcare industry without being noticed. In this chapter, I’ll take a few such mysterious cases and explain why.
According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, healthcare is efforts made to maintain or restore physical, mental, or emotional well-being especially by trained and licensed professionals. There are mainstreams and adjuncts among professionals. The mainstream is the most influential actor and is in a privileged position. To maintain privilege, it is common for mainstream people to try to establish a hegemonic position by involving their adjuncts.
In healthcare, medical care is at the center and all other healthcare areas are adjuncts. In medical care, treatment is at the center of the center, and prevention is one of adjuncts. Considering the pursuit of profits and strengthening of the position of medical care providers, it is better to increase the number of patients without prevention even if some patients must die. As a supporting evidence, in the pharmaceutical industry, it is an implicit understanding that the companies should not develop drugs that eliminate diseases, because the market will disappear like smallpox market by its vaccine. That is why RNA vaccine, which works faster and more effective than ordinary protein vaccines, did not take place until it was urgently approved as a corona vaccine. If RNA is used to produce stem cells, iPS cells (induced pluripotent stem cells), pluripotent stem cells, regenerative medicine for diseases including aging care and immunotherapy for the treatment of cancer will advance dramatically. Complete treatment of disease, organ regeneration, and immortal medicine have been hampered by mainstream groups to professionals. Mainstream has denied such a wonderful future as disease-free and immortal medical care.
The medical professionals should be humble about the dignity of life. When new facts are discovered, it is up to the mainstream to spread or not. The mainstream instantly includes new discoveries that can deny the mainstream. However, the mainstream attacks and denies the new discovery which can coexist with the mainstream. The reasons and causes for such absurd things to happen are for the benefit of the mainstream. Various inhumane obstacles occur, so the details are described below,
The openness of medical care is the exact opposite in Japan and the US. In Japan, not only paramedics but the nurses only can watch the patients die until the doctor arrives. Oppositely, in the US, medical practice is open to medical assistants and paramedics. They can take life-saving measures for emergency patients who are clearly likely to die if left untreated.
Why does such a difference between the two countries occur? In short, it depends on whether the market is free or regulated. The American way seeks efficiency through a free and open market. The Japanese government operates policies assuming that medical care is at the center and others are adjuncts. This is derived from the fundamental differences in public policies between the two countries.
The U.S. government and its local agency, the U.S. embassy, have repeatedly demanded the Japanese government to open and liberalize the medical and healthcare market, but with no success, while promoting the reasons for the free-open market. For American businesses to enter the Japanese market, it is essential to deregulate the Japanese market. The U.S., which had been the world’s factory until Japan emerged, has attempted to take an initiative to the world’s industry by securities financing. Therefore, the US government must protect the domestic market from foreign countries but ask free and open markets to foreign governments for maintaining a global hegemony. Such American diplomacy is well-known as a double standard. The importance of the role of government is strongly asserted by American economists. It is the American way to manage social welfare services such as medical care based on the principle of competition that works in an open market. Consequently, the gap about accessibility to medical care between Japan and the U. S. has been still expanding. Table 1 shows the accessibilities to medical care by costs for treating appendectomy in major countries.
Rank | City | Expenses (US$) | Hospitalization Days |
---|---|---|---|
1 | New York (US) | 14,000-40,000$ | 1–3 days |
2 | Paris (France) | 2,000-8,800 | days |
3 | Madrid (Spain) | 4,000-8,350 | 4 days |
4 | London (UK) | 6,700 | 2 days |
5 | Rome (Italy) | 6,300-6,650 | 3 days |
6 | Geneva (Switzerland) | 2,530 | 3 days |
7 | Vancouver (Canada) | 6,060 | 3 days |
8 | Singapore (Singapore) | 3,180-3,970 | 3 days |
9 | Dusseldorf (Germany) | 3,250 | 3 days |
10 | (General example) (Japan) | 2,730 | 6–7 days |
Costs for treating appendectomy in major countries (accessibilities to medical care by costs).
Cited from Tokio Marine & Nichido Fire Insurance Co., Ltd.
Source: Japan Medical Association Homepage: “World Medical Care and Safety 2010” [1].
According to the Japan Medical Association, the US is the country with the widest medical disparity in the world. “Public medical insurance in the US is limited to “Medicare” for the elderly aged 65 and over and persons with disabilities, and “Medicaid” for low-income earners. The active generation, which is not covered by these two, is mainly covered by private medical insurance. The so-called “Obama Care” obliges people who do not have public medical insurance to join a private insurance company, but there are only a limited number of medical institutions available for medical examination. Many people are still uninsured in order not to be able to pay the insurance premium. There is a big disparity in the medical care provided” [1].
In Japan, medicine and healthcare are recognized as public goods. The government has, therefore, an obligation to protect the domestic market from free-competitive destruction. Japan attaches great importance to accessibility that anyone can access anywhere and fair use of medical care as public goods. The Government of Japan is responsible for ensuring that all the people can receive the necessary medical care. Therefore, a fundamental difference between the two countries exists in the medical care and healthcare.
Until around 1955, about 30 million people, mainly farmers, self-employed, and employees of micro enterprises, which is about one-third of the population, were uninsured in Japan, which was a social problem. However, the National Health Insurance Law was enacted in 1958, and the National Health Insurance business began in municipalities nationwide in 1961, establishing a system that allows “anyone,” “anywhere,” and “anytime” to receive insurance medical care [2].
Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare has declared that the role of this system as a safety net is essential as follows:
“Under the universal health insurance system, Japan has realized a medical system that allows anyone to receive medical care securely and has achieved the world’s highest average life expectancy and healthcare standards. We will continue to aim for a sustainable public medical insurance system in response to the declining birthrate, increase in the aging population, population, and changes in the economic situation” [3].
From the social side, mainstream blocks the entry of others to strengthen its power. Mainstreamers can get various benefits and others are excluded. Partial optimization for mainstream results in the lack of total optimization as shown in Table 1. On the economic side, mainstreams amplify their interests while blocking the entry. This accelerates the centralization by mainstream, that starts to have a gravitational force that attracts various things. Mainstreamers begin to exert hegemonic influence to stakeholders and concessions authorized by the government create a chain of interests.
From the standpoint of the government and the market, initially, everything starts with a good idea for society, but policies act to fix benefits. They compete for the pie of government budgets. Governmental policies will be taken to ensure vested interests. Historically, the economy has set the direction for government. In the US, the globalized economy has gained centrality, set the direction of government, and could therefore gain the hegemony in the healthcare. Thus, as a result, a mechanism has been created in which mainstreamers increase profit and the public does not get the lowest benefits in the world.
On the publicity in the US, at the center of political economy, the centrality determines everything through funding for politicians, the media, university professors, and researchers. It is well known that every public good is commercialized in the US by the logic, that competition in the market is better than government control.
The situation surrounding the potentially life-threatening medical care is dire and irreversible. A typical example is Medicaid. Medicaid is a government medical benefit system for low-income people who have difficulty in taking out private medical insurances (including persons with disabilities and pregnant women who are recipients of supplementary income security). The cost of Medicaid is increasing from 1980s’ when market fundamentalism was applied to medical care, as shown in Figure 1.
Public healthcare insurances and social security expenses in the United States (Wikipedia) [Internet]. 2021. Available from:
Regarding medical expenses in the US, according to the Medicare Medicaid Service Center in the US, medical expenses in the US in 2018 totaled $ 3.6 trillion, and $ 11,172 per capita. It accounts for 17.7% of GDP. The medical cost per capita in Japan is $ 2,920 (321,100 yen), which is almost four times higher.
Even though medical expenses and the US government spending on per capita are the highest in the world, it is far from a universal service that allows people to live safely, securely. Only the US and Mexico have failed to achieve universal healthcare in OECD countries [4]. The lack of medical insurance in the US causes 45,000 to 48,000 unnecessary deaths each year [5, 6]. About 25 percent of young citizens have filed for bankruptcy due to high medical costs, and 43 percent of them have sold real estate for that purpose [7].
In the US, the power of centrality introduces market principles to what is in publicity, and businesses succeed in profiting from the people and the government, resulting in poverty and pressure on the government’s finances.
As mentioned above, there is a negative correlation between the degree of inequality and accessibility. What makes the difference between Japan and the US? Japan focuses on protecting people. Japan is a country that values dignity for life and ethics. In the US as well, business executives were highly aware of high moral aspirations, wide moral foundation [8] and public institutions [9] for people and society till 1950s’.
Due to the championship of huge securities financing capital, globalization has been progressing in the US. As the securities financing business has played a central role in the US economy, the US have assumed that free competition in the market would solve social problems. Free competition strategy has helped the US securities financing industry rule its economic and political hegemony in the global market.
The US spends the most on healthcare in high-income countries. Total medical expenses per capita has been continuously rising from 1981 [10]. Table 2 shows the ranking of medical expenses per capita. The total medical expense per capita in the US is 2.22 times that of Japan, 2.60 times that of the United Kingdom, and 2.65 times that of the OECD average. Total medical expense of the US is the highest, despite the worst medical care for the public.
Country | Healthcare Rank | Total medical expenses per capita (US$) |
---|---|---|
United States | 1 | 10,586.08 |
Switzerland | 2 | 7,316.61 |
Norway | 3 | 6,186.92 |
Germany | 4 | 5,986.43 |
G7 Average | 5,539.29 | |
Sweden | 5 | 5,447.11 |
Austria | 6 | 5,395.11 |
Denmark | 7 | 5,298.82 |
Netherlands | 8 | 5,288.44 |
Luxembourg | 9 | 5,070.17 |
Australia | 10 | 5,005.32 |
Canada | 11 | 4,974.33 |
France | 12 | 4,964.71 |
Belgium | 13 | 4,943.54 |
Ireland | 14 | 4,869.36 |
Japan | 15 | 4,766.07 |
Oceania Average | 16 | 4,463.98 |
Iceland | 17 | 4,349.09 |
Finland | 18 | 4,235.55 |
United Kingdom | 19 | 4,069.57 |
OECD Average | 3,992.35 |
Ranking of medical expenses per capita in 2018.
Source: OECD Health Data.
In Japan, Japan’s Big Bang package was done from April 1, 1998 to March 2001. The first liberalization removes barriers for foreign companies to buy or to sell Japanese companies. As a result, shareholders started to ask high dividend on stock. Restructuring was carried out as companies prioritized immediate profits over the future. The unemployment rate in Japan is steadily increasing, and the number of non-regular employees is also increasing, which is a factor of disparity.
Regarding healthcare system, Japanese public opinion and the government have not chosen the policies to widen the inequality, because the right to life is guaranteed by the Constitution as well as the right to live a healthy and cultural life. On the contrary, there is no right-to-life clause in the US Constitution.
According to WHO (the World Health Organization), a well-functioning healthcare system requires a steady financing mechanism, a properly-trained and adequately-paid workforce, well-maintained facilities, and access to reliable information to base decisions on. These include the care process (preventative care measures, safe care, coordinated care, and engagement and patient preferences), access (affordability and timeliness), administrative efficiency, equity, and healthcare outcomes (population health, mortality amenable to healthcare, and disease-specific health outcomes) [11]. Based on these five measures, WHO publishes health system rankings “Measuring Overall Health System Performance for 191 Countries” as shown in Table 3.
Country | Healthcare Rank | 2021 Population |
---|---|---|
France | 1 | 65,426,179 |
Italy | 2 | 60,367,477 |
San Marino | 3 | 34,017 |
Andorra | 4 | 77,355 |
Malta | 5 | 442,784 |
Singapore | 6 | 5,896,686 |
Spain | 7 | 46,745,216 |
Oman | 8 | 5,223,375 |
Austria | 9 | 9,043,070 |
Japan | 10 | 126,050,804 |
Norway | 11 | 5,465,630 |
Portugal | 12 | 10,167,925 |
Monaco | 13 | 39,511 |
Greece | 14 | 10,370,744 |
Iceland | 15 | 343,353 |
Luxembourg | 16 | 634,814 |
Netherlands | 17 | 17,173,099 |
United Kingdom | 18 | 68,207,116 |
Ireland | 19 | 4,982,907 |
Switzerland | 20 | 8,715,494 |
Belgium | 21 | 11,632,326 |
Colombia | 22 | 51,265,844 |
Sweden | 23 | 10,160,169 |
Cyprus | 24 | 1,215,584 |
Germany | 25 | 83,900,473 |
Saudi Arabia | 26 | 35,340,683 |
United Arab Emirates | 27 | 9,991,089 |
Israel | 28 | 8,789,774 |
Morocco | 29 | 37,344,795 |
Canada | 30 | 38,067,903 |
Finland | 31 | 5,548,360 |
Australia | 32 | 25,788,215 |
Chile | 33 | 19,212,361 |
Denmark | 34 | 5,813,298 |
Dominica | 35 | 72,167 |
Costa Rica | 36 | 5,139,052 |
United States | 37 | 332,915,073 |
Ranking of well-functioning national healthcare systems in 2021 (by WHO) [10].
Yet the U.S. population has poorer health than other countries. Life expectancy, after improving for several decades, worsened in recent years for some populations, aggravated by the opioid crisis. In addition, as the baby boom population ages, more people in the US—and all over the world—are living with age-related disabilities and chronic disease, placing pressure on healthcare systems to respond [12].
A study by The Commonwealth Fund [12] used these metrics to rank 11 countries based on their quality of healthcare. The top-ranked countries are the United Kingdom, Australia, and the Netherlands. Regarding care process, the US also performs above the 11-country average on preventive measures like mammography screening and older adult influenza immunization rates. However, the US performs poorly on several coordination measures, including information flows among primary care providers, specialist and social service providers. The US also lags other countries on avoidable hospital admissions.
Among them, the US ranks last on Access. The performance of the U.S. is the worst in all countries on the affordability subdomain, scoring. According to these discussions, there is no dispute that affordability and timeliness are key elements of accessibility. And these factors determine the health of the people in a nation.
Because of the Japanese strict national licensing system, medical insurance companies lacked the willingness to take on new challenges. Take advantage of the opportunity not to change anything, cancer insurance had come from the US. The typical success case of the US was the monopoly of cancer insurance in the Japanese market by Aflac, a small US insurer, which prevented Japanese insurance companies not to enter the market from1972 to 2001. The US has repeatedly made demands for the US industries, as Japan has always been reluctant and weak against the demands of the US. Japan-US insurance talks held at the same time as the talks to break the trade conflict between Japan and the US. At that time, the original purpose was trade negotiations, but regardless of that, the US securities financing industries, which have economic and political central influence in the US, aimed to enter the Japanese market. It is agreed that cancer insurance and medical insurance cannot be sold by Japanese major life insurance companies and non-life insurance companies in Japan. As a result, Japanese insurance companies have been unable to enter the market for a long time, and Aflac, which entered the Japanese cancer insurance market in 1974, maintains an overwhelming market share.
By this time, the US had already shifted its focus from manufacturing to securities financing. During this period, policy had shifted to increase international influence through the securities financing industries for overwhelming the industrialized nation of Japan. Economists had gotten influential power on federal policymaking since the late 1960s, leading the US in the wrong direction about domestic healthcare system and fostering social disparity. The big problem was that many economists unconditionally believed that free competition and free trade were best. Many economists sacrifice welfare and prioritize efficiency.
It is the American way to manage social welfare services such as medical care based on the principle of competition that works in an open market. This has made the healthcare industry inefficient, as afore mentioned in the former sections. The cost of treatment for common illnesses became unusually high after 1980. Disparity expanded among professionals as well. Low quality doctors go to poor areas. Excellent doctors who can get a high salary gather in the area where rich people live. Medical disparities are further widening due to the phenomenon of cream skimming, which businesses only enter profitable areas. Medical disparity is a detrimental effect of free competition. Therefore, there will be many medical refugees who cannot receive the necessary medical care like developing countries.
On the other hand, Japan attaches great importance to fairness in accessibility that anyone can access anywhere. To give the simplest example, in Japan, anyone can be treated equally by a well-known doctor in any hospital without appointment. As a code of ethics to guarantee the access, doctors are prohibited by law from refusing to see a patient.
It looks like the government is providing good healthcare, but it won’t do anything new. Therefore, organizations that should promote innovation can defend themselves. Such a thing was permitted within the authorities, so the approved ranking of anti-corona vaccines was the last among developed countries. In addition to the delay in approval of the vaccine against the anti-cervical cancer virus, which has confirmed clear efficacy and had been approved in advanced countries, it has not been approved for use by men. This is because the head of the vaccine department of the authorities continued to extend approval to the next person in charge for fear of side effects.
The John Maddox Prize is an award given by “Nature” to those who have contributed to the dissemination of science and scientific evidence for the public good. In 2017, it was presented to Riko Muranaka, a medical doctor and journalist who has continued to send out information to verify the safety of the HPV vaccine. Nature described the HPV vaccine as “recognized by the scientific community and medical community as a key to preventing cervical cancer and other cancers and endorsed by the WHO (World Health Organization).” Moreover, in Japan the vaccine has been subject to a national misinformation campaign to discredit its benefits, results in vaccination rates falling from 70% to less than 1%. “ Nature evaluated her activities as “spreading science and scientific evidence for the public interest while facing difficulties and hostility,“ and selected from 100 candidates from 25 countries. Ms. Muranaka said, “I think it’s powerless to see that the situation has not changed even though I’ve written so much.“ The biggest problem is not being there. The nation must take responsibility for the lives of its people. “ Nature severely criticized the situation in Japan, saying that “a false information campaign that undermines the reliability of this vaccine was carried out nationwide” [13]. The data to disseminate false information was deliberately forged by an authoritative university professor who received research funding from the authorities to create fake data to deny.
For public interest, universal services should be obliged by the government to provide benefits to all, regardless of wealth, social class, men and women of all ages, or region. Even in Japan, where bioethics and publicity are the top priorities, the reality is beyond imagination. Professionals try to be central by acting for their own benefit. Once power is centralized, it is a virtue within the mainstream to not change unless it is related to their own interests.
The US government and scholars argue that if regulators decide everything, they will not be able to provide adequate medical care to the public. This is because regulation would make it as if there was only one monopoly and would not try for customers [14]. Mainstream scholars such as Michael Porter have argued that better medical care should be provided in the competition. In fact, the most advanced medical care is being developed and provided in the US. As a result, the most expensive medical ecosystem in the world and the lowest accessibility among developed countries has been created.
Figure 2 shows the annual change in the monopoly of American hospitals. An HHI (Herfindahl–Hirschman Index) score is the sum of the squares of the market share of each player in a market. For example, in a market where there is only one hospital — a monopoly — with 100 percent market share, that market’s HHI score is 10,000 (100 squared). A market with only two hospitals, in which one has 60 percent share and the other 40 percent, has an HHI of 5,200 (60 squared plus 40 squared). The Federal Trade Commission considers markets to be “highly concentrated” if their HHI scores are 2,500 or higher. In other industries, such as airlines or cell-phone carriers, the FTC routinely seeks to block mergers that would increase HHI scores above 2,500. In the hospital industry, however, the median market HHI exceeded 2,500 in the year 2000 and reached 2,800 in 2013 [15].
Annual trends in the degree of monopoly by large hospitals in the US (source: “Avik Roy, The Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity”).
A new wave of hospital mergers is driving market concentration higher. The blue bars denote the number of merger and acquisition transactions in a given year; in the 1990s, penetration of managed-care insurers, with a mandate for more aggressive cost control, led hospitals to merge in response, strengthening their market power over the insurers. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the US. Department of Justice (DOJ) normally consider markets with an HHI above 1,500 as “moderately concentrated” and markets with HHI above 2,500 as “highly concentrated,” triggering antitrust litigation. However, consolidated hospital markets have largely avoided antitrust litigation. In 21th century, more than half of the hospital markets in the US have an HHI above 2,500, meaning that the FTC and DOJ would consider them to be “highly concentrated” (Sources: A. Roy/FREOPP analysis and graphics, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Martin Gaynor, Irving Levin Associates, HHS ASPE.) [15].
Market concentration contributes to raising the profit margin not only in the medical industry but also in the healthcare industry to get the highest interest rates in the world. In conclusion, the medical industry, which has increased its centrality by concentrating, is the most profitable in the world. The influence of this medical hegemony has resulted in poor accessibility to healthcare in general.
The situation in which a hospital becomes huge and has an impact on overall healthcare could be defined as medical hegemony. According to WHO, universal healthcare can be determined by three critical dimensions: who is covered, what services are covered, and how much of the cost is covered [16]. In the US, hospitals, health insurance companies, and pharmaceutical companies have become huge after 1980. Such huge healthcare providers have taken medical hegemonies and guide policies. Eventually, lack of accessibility results in unsatisfactory access to the medical needs of the public. As a result, WHO and the National Academy of Medicine and others have concluded the US is the only wealthy, industrialized nation that does not provide universal healthcare in 2021.
Medical care has its own peculiarities. In the medical and long-term care fields, only the provider has the information. Patients have no choice but to believe and entrust without bargaining even if they lie. Therefore, those who provide low-cost and high-priced medical care services accumulate profits and dominate the market. Once become huge, they can affect various fields and the hegemony has been established.
Even if information is disclosed for the purpose of resolving information asymmetry, it is practically impossible for consumers to have equal bargaining power. Therefore, in free competition, the supply side has an absolute advantage in deciding what to do. In free competition in a state where information is asymmetric and bargaining power is imbalanced, prices rise by the following mechanism, resulting in the exclusion of consumers [17].
If the information is completely asymmetric, free competition will bring about market failure. Consumers do not know whether good or bad (lemon), so the bad suppliers survive and the good suppliers disappear. As a result, inferior products (lemon) are on the market. (The market for lemons)
If there are essential remedies and treatment methods, the supply side can raise the price as the demand increases. This is the result of price equilibrium when demand increases for limited resources (rents) such as land. (The law of rent)
The best management strategy for the supply side is to enter the market with the highest profit margin. Competitors lose if they do not do the same. (Prisoner’s dilemma causes bubbles and injustice).
The optimization strategy for the supply side causes inefficiency of the entire industry and create barriers that customers cannot get involved with. (Total inefficiency by partial optimization)
In the free competition market, there are many people who cannot receive satisfactory medical care because they cannot pay. On the contrary, those who can afford high treatment can enjoy exclusively top-level medicine. Thus, the barrier between supply and demand remains high. The gap in accessibility from consumers deepens and cannot easily repair once medical hegemony is fixed.
Digital healthcare is expected to increase the accessibility of medical information and to remove the medical barrier. Although this optimism is believed, real-world healthcare can be severely affected by the knowledge and context shared in the healthcare industry and academia. The problem is that common knowledge is spread by mainstream people.
The use of patterned knowledge from mainstream facilitates the use of medical information. Further utilization of smart ICT will facilitate to realize the smart use of medical information in our daily lives and therefore improve the accessibility to healthcare information. Through this process, the central perception will quickly gain consensus in the industry and academic societies. Through such a process, practical knowledge is unified and spreads quickly. In this way, mainstream contexts quickly become more and more widespread. In other words, this makes it easier for mainstream to establish hegemony.
Hegemons have become the center of the world and gained centrality by setting a global standard. This strategy allowed hegemony to accumulate economic power and become the center of politics, economy, and society. To maintain centrality, hegemons have no choice but to do rent seeking for themselves, not for the total benefit. Figure 3 illustrates the transition of hegemonic nations. The hegemonic nation is deprived of the next hegemony by a neighboring country across the sea. By imitating and improving the previous economic system, neighboring countries that do not interact directly have become hegemonic nations one after another [18].
Transition of hegemonic countries [
1. Egypt prospered from the fertile land of the Nile and its slave civilization. 2. the Greek police nations become the center of trade, 3. Rome is based on the vast territory that supplies slaves, 4. Islam relays East-west trade, and 5. Spain mined gold and silver in South America and circulated minted coins in Europe. 6. the Netherlands became the global trade center with currency exchange, 7. the United Kingdom became the financial center (Citi) and the world’s factory by Industrial Revolution, 8. the US became the world’s factory by the mass production system and then global securities and financial center, 9. Japan realized mixed production system with small-volume plus mass customization and became the world’s factory, 10. South Korea, 11. Taiwan, and 13. China acquired the world market with imitation power.
A hegemon could become the center of the world by imitating and surpassing the previous hegemonic power [19].
The reason for the emergence of hegemonic states can be seen from the fact that the source of hegemony is not civilization but economic power.
Can doctors adhere to justice fairly and selflessly in all situations? Hippocratic oath is an international norm that doctors should comply with. The ethical code attributed to the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates, adopted as a guide to conduct by the medical profession throughout the ages and still used in the graduation ceremonies of many medical schools. The oath dictates the obligations of the physician to students of medicine and the duties of pupil to teacher. In the oath, the physician pledges to prescribe only beneficial treatments, according to his abilities and judgment; to refrain from causing harm or hurt; and to live an exemplary personal and professional life (Encyclopedia Britannica).
In the medical world, the problem is physicians have never accepted novel approaches when treatments does not replace current therapy. Players in the mainstream (stakeholders such as opinion leaders, physicians, pharmaceutical firms, university professors etc.) are not only reluctant to try any noble therapeutic approaches, but they have always denied and attacked.
It is well-known that medical hegemony intends to stabilize its position by undermining the fair use of information. For judging the correctness of medical information, it is possible to check simply whether one piece of simplified information is yes or no. Yes/no methods can clarify responsibility in the event of an error. RNA injection is a typical example that used to be no but became yes. The properties of cells can be altered by introducing RNA instead of genetic engineering. Therefore, the rapid supply of corona RNA vaccine became possible. In addition, RNA injection can be used for in vivo production of pluripotent cells instead of in vitro production of iPS cells.
RNA injection method was denied by mainstreamers. This is explained by inevitable win-lose theory that indirect competitive innovation is neglected by mainstreamers. Surprisingly, in case of direct competition, mainstreamers accept new thing, but in case of indirect competition, they deny the new one [19, 20, 21, 22]. The reason is that they will be replaced by challengers if they do not accept directly competitive thing. However, without exception, they deny new things that indirectly compete with. Usually they spread fake information. They choose the immediate stability because they cannot be replaced immediately. It often takes time to be replaced, but the mainstream faction changes. It should be noted that both actions are taken to defend the position of the championship.
Nevertheless, professionals will continue to disseminate the information claimed by the mainstream. This is because expressing disagreement has adverse events. Whenever novel treatments are discovered that do not directly replace traditional one, they are denied without evidence and prevent them from being adopted. Table 4 shows categorized patterns of disinformation deliberately created by the mainstreamers [23].
CV (Cardiovascular) was the most major therapeutic area in the world. Ca blocker has created a market with a particularly high share in Japan. Authorities in the CV area were respected as representatives of physicians. This therapeutic area covers not only hypertension, but also all over the lifestyle-related disease. In this type of prioritized therapeutic area, companies create mainstream by writing treatises and giving research achievements to company-nominated opinion leaders, young doctors, and supporters based on each strategy. Therefore, major physicians in the CV field have kept a tight relationship with pharmaceutical firms and have received financial support especially as research fund. Pharmaceutical companies have also set up programs to train prominent young doctors for next new product developments and marketing purposes.
Therapy | Traditional | Novel therapeutics |
---|---|---|
1) Few targeted patients | ||
CV in Japan (Cardiovascular) | Ca blocker | ARB (Angiotensin receptor blocker) |
2) Slow onset of effect | ||
GI in Japan (Gastrointestinal) | H2 blocker | PPI (Proton pump inhibitor) Helicobacter pylori extermination |
3) Not immediate effect | ||
Anti-cancer drug | Chemotherapy | Antibody drug, cancer vaccine |
4) High satisfaction | ||
RA (Rheumatoid Arthritis) | Symptomatic treatment (MTX: methotrexate) | Antibody drug (anti-TNF) |
5) Evaluation criterions are unknow | ||
Transfusion alternative | Red blood cells transfusion | EPO (Erythropoietin, red blood substitute) |
6) Biopharmaceuticals | Small compounds | G-CSF |
7) Regeneration | No way | iPS cells, RNA drugs |
8) Oligonucleotide Therapeutics | Oligonucleotide does not enter the cell. Anxiety of possible genetic mutations, without evidence | RNA or DNA injection, Speed-up approval for in vivo antibody production against coronavirus Autologous cell therapy by pluripotent cell proliferation |
Disinformation on novel therapy created by the mainstream [23].
According to major Japanese pharmaceutical firms, fast onset was the key point of Ca blockers. Therefore, common opinion was that there were few cases to be targeted by a new ARB (Angiotensin receptor blocker) therapy because ARB is not fast-acting. However, the fact was exactly the opposite. Only amlodipine, which had a slow onset and a long half-life just like ARB, was increasing sales.
In Japan, all opinion leaders and major journals did not support ARB, even after ARB became the first choice among all other countries. By author’s effort, a Japanese firm could get a license of ARB from a German big Ca player despite company-wide opposition.
Despite such industry-wide dissenting opinions, the share of the new therapy reached over 70% of the patients once the first ARB was launched. Although the overall evidence approved lifestyle-related diseases, professionals ignored the merit of organ-protective effect of ARB. Mainstream companionship is not evidence-based.
GI (Gastrointestinal) area is the largest market in the world till around 2010. A world-top share H2 (Histamine 2 receptor) blocker was originated by a Japanese firm. It was well recognized among Japanese firms and mainstream professors that extermination of
Mainstream professors and physicians received financial supports. Running out of money is a problem. The world top share product, which is originated by a Japanese firm, suppresses the immune elimination of cancer cells by NK cell inactivation since histamine is essential to activate NK cells.
Japanese pharmaceutical firms advertised that new PPI (Proton pump inhibitor) therapy did not cure the symptoms. Eradication of gastric ulcer and gastric cancer causative bacteria, Helicobacter pylori, by PPI was a standard therapy in Europe and the US. Approval in Japan delayed more than 10 years. PPI became the first choice once the patent for top-seller H2 blocker expired. This witnesses the strength of dominance.
Table 5 shows that the ratio of deaths by stomach cancer is the highest among other countries in 2005 (before the PPI era). The death rate of stomach cancer in Japan is 10 times higher than that of Americas. It is known in the pharmaceutical industry that this is due to the widespread of a top-seller H2 blocker in Japan.
Anti-cancer therapy is mainly by drug therapy in combination with surgery or radiation. Anticancer drugs control the growth of cancerous cells by toxicity.
Cancer Death | Overall Stomach Cancer | Lung Cancer | |
---|---|---|---|
Japan | 303.3 | 52.2 | 67.6 |
Americas | 207.2 | 5.3 | 65.5 |
UK | 279.2 | 13.7 | 70.0 |
France | 303.2 | 11.0 | 72.0 |
The ratio of deaths by stomach cancer per 100,000 men in 2005.
Source: Cancer Statistics, National Cancer Center Japan.
When antibodies that suppress the growth factors of breast cancer cells had been developed, firms, professors and physicians have denied every time. As proof of lack of intension, they do not conduct in-hospital trials for applicants like toxic drug candidates. The drug delay has happened all over the world.
All professionals have denied the effectiveness of antibody drugs and the anti-cervical cancer vaccine mentioned above. HTLV (Human T) was first discovered as a causative virus of adult T-cell lymphoma (ATL) by Dr. Hinuma at Kyoto University in 1977. A negative campaign against cancer viruses’ existence was held through the 20th century. Many scholars, who have been associated with the prestigious professors of the mainstream, have been openly, unfounded, and emotional, and have continued to deny until very recently. It has been proved that more than 30 percent of cancers have been caused by cancer viruses, which are increasing year by year.
Rheumatoid arthritis destroys joints due to autoimmunity, and eventually the organs are gradually destroyed, resulting in multiple organ failure and death. MTX (methotrexate), which have an immunosuppressive effect on symptomatic treatment, is widely used. New antibody therapy (anti-TNF antibody), which blocked immune cells from killing patients’ bodies, were neglected, despite mainstreamers watched an evidence that patients with difficulty of walking started walking quickly after injection. If they are cured completely, they do not need to visit doctors.
MTX therapy is practiced as a standard treatment all over the world and satisfied doctors. MTX is mildly toxic but are popular as a first choice, so the conclusion was there was no need to change treatments.
EPO(Erythropoietin) stimulates red blood cell proliferation (erythropoiesis) in the bone marrow. EPO is an alternative to blood transfusions, but it was denied that red blood cell transfusion is cheap.
EPO is now used in treating anemia resulting from chronic kidney disease, chemotherapy induced anemia in patients with cancer, inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis) and myelodysplasia caused by cancer chemotherapy or radiation.
The risk of viral infection is greatly reduced. If a cancer patient can be operated on without blood transfusion, the rate of recurrence and metastasis of cancer is greatly reduced because immune disturbance is not caused without blood transfusion.
Biopharmaceuticals are categorized 5 major classes; extracts from living systems, recombinant products, vaccines, gene therapy, RNA or DNA drugs (nucleic acid drugs).
G-CSF (Granulocyte Colony-stimulating Factor) is a type of growth factor. Patients might have G-CSF after chemotherapy to help their white blood cells recover after treatment.
It was rejected by mainstreamers except bio-venture firm, because of different treatment criteria. Mainstreamers and larger pharmaceutical firms resisted and opposed the new treatment to stimulate granulocyte proliferation.
Total market size of Biopharmaceuticals is beyond the half. This means the utility of biopharmaceuticals has been neglected by mainstreamers and professionals. According to IQVIA World Review Analyst 2020 forecast [24], the pharmaceutical market in 2019 was $ 1.2624 trillion, up 3.3% from last year. The market share of the top 100 pharmaceutical sales items (hereinafter referred to as the top items) was about 32%. Total sales of top items in 2019 were $ 401.3 billion, up 6.4% from last year. According to the technical classification of active ingredients (chemically synthesized drugs and biopharmaceuticals), there are 55 items of chemically synthesized drugs and 45 items of biopharmaceuticals, which is higher than the 2018 survey (59 items and 41 items, respectively). biopharmaceuticals increased by 4 items. Among the top items, 10 items have been replaced since 2018, of which 5 items have been replaced by 9 items and biopharmaceuticals items have been replaced by 5 items and 1 item has been replaced year by year. In addition, biopharmaceuticals sales accounted for $ 209.7 billion, 52% of top item sales, and although synthetic drugs accounted for more items, biopharmaceuticals accounted for more than half of sales for the first time in previous surveys.
Regeneration
Regenerative medicine will be the ultimate medical treatment aiming at immortalization and complete cure. Drug companies and mainstreamers do not develop complete cures that will eliminate the need for drug administration and shrink the market.
Around 1988, the author applied to MHW (the Ministry of Health and Welfare), Japan Health Sciences Foundation, major firms and JPMA (Japan Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association) a research project on the generation of pluripotent cells by gene transfer as an innovative research theme. The proposal was neglected to adopt as a research theme because complete cures eliminate the market.
All doctors have still denied that the cells were reprogrammed. This is incompatible with a basic principle of embryology, the developmental process of higher organisms repeats evolutionary process (the law of developmental repetition, Haeckel’s Law). For biologists, regeneration overturns their basic assumptions.
That is why mainstreamers at Kyoto University still underestimate the possibility of iPS cells and overstate that the risk. Since the mutation rate of cells is higher in liquid culture than in vivo, they should develop a culture system like in the body. The creation of iPS cells or pluripotent cells by direct injection of RNA into the human body would reduce the risk of genetic mutation.
Oligonucleotide therapeutics uses basically RNA or DNA. Oligonucleotides are nucleic acid polymers with the potential to treat or manage a wide range of diseases and can be used to modulate gene expression via a range of processes including RNAi (RNA interference), target degradation by RNase H-mediated cleavage, splicing modulation, non-coding RNA inhibition, gene activation and programmed gene editing. As such, these molecules have potential therapeutic applications for myriad indications, with several oligonucleotide drugs recently gaining approval [25]. As shown in the above Nature Review [25], although the majority of oligonucleotide therapeutics have focused on gene silencing, other strategies are being delayed or neglected by mainstreamers.
Oligonucleotide drugs such as RNA or DNA injection for producing antibodies was supposed to be ineffective and risky without evidence. Well-known mainstream scholars slandered the developers. As a matter of fact, only venture companies were developing quietly.
Suddenly in early 2020, rapid vaccine development and urgent supply were needed to prevent the spread of coronavirus. Speed-up approval of RNA or DNA vaccines against coronavirus was given worldwide, but Japan was the lowest in the world.
As a matter of life and death, the clinical trials were urged to conduct development of coronavirus vaccine. Similarly, immunotherapy for cancer should be as safe and effective as vaccines in post-infection adverse effects. However, almost professionals and drug companies are still not willing to admit.
RNA produces iPS cells therapeutics will repair complete body and will pave the way for spontaneous healing with their own cells. There is some evidence that such treatments are effective. As an example, in our brains, 50,000 nascent neural stem cells are born every day. Even at the age of 80, the same amount of regeneration as young people happens. Full-function recovery therapeutics by oligonucleotide will become the ultimate complete cure treatment. Complete healing of aging or diseases is unacceptable to mainstreamers. They do not intend to contribute to human healthcare, because they will definitely lose the hegemony in the current system. How to solve the problem is the next issue to be discussed.
Through the discussions so far, author has analyzed the actions taken by mainstream people in medical care and healthcare, which deal with life and health. The mainstreamers always win any new product developments that directly competes with and therefore replace the mainstream [19, 20, 21, 22].
In case of indirect competition, mainstreamers inevitably lose any new product developments. As far as a new does not directly compete with the mainstream, they deny the fact until the mainstream is replaced. Even if treatments begin to be adopted, mainstreamers always deny and criticize the use of alternative treatments. For example, the evidence is that the discovery of the presence of a cancer virus, the ability to artificially generate pluripotent stem cells, and the fact that RNA can be used for treatment are not acknowledged and criticized.
Mainstreamers do not approve such facts until they understand that they will be replaced soon. Due to the dominant structure of the mainstream, novel therapeutics such as desensitization therapy using oral immunity for pollinosis and cervical cancer virus vaccination for men many innovative approaches delayed approvals by the Authorities. Many have been sacrificed by mainstreamers.
The method to eliminate such evils and realize truly useful healthcare is required. The effect and influence of the commons of information will become a solution to eliminating adverse events caused by the hegemonic mainstream. As the most effective means in the coming digital healthcare era, commons of information is now under construction. In July of 2020, Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare confirmed its policy of intensively working over the next two years to operate a system that allows medical institutions and pharmacies nationwide to share medical information of patients online and use it for patient treatment and health promotion. Customers and service providers such as doctors pharmacists, health instructors, nurses in charge can check the treatment history. In these ways, the information that the doctor has kept secret is inevitably made public and reviewed, which can lead to criticism in some cases. Even if that patient can find a provider, the existing healthcare system is likely to create a lot of unnecessary impediment and expense in the US. Digital pharmacy expands access to professional healthcare. It would be a great start to access and utilize such kind of commons of information.
With the rapid penetration of the mobile Internet into everyday life, the ruler of the information is changing. Innovative ideas are realized instantly on the mobile and advanced media, according to instant innovation [26, 27, 28].
As various media are put to practical use in general life, the media affects not only on everything in our society and life. As a result of the widespread use of mobile terminals, advanced media has being breaking down the barriers built by the mainstream with hegemony by setting net neutrality in the instant communication through mobile.
Mobiles process various information in parallel and multiple parallel worlds exist at the same time. Information selection has made it possible for users to create necessary information from the side that creates information, and users have come to directly experiment and implement it. This kind of instant communication leads instant innovation [26].
Already, some app platforms for disclosure and use of medical information have been developed. Open information will be searchable in Information Commons, a platform for sharing information. There is no doubt that patients and end users who need information will become aware of everything from daily healthcare to disease information.
Instant innovation that happens on mobile is the opposite of traditional innovation, because end users choose their best. Moreover, the product is evaluated immediately. Therefore, the adjustment is performed so that it is easy to use from the customer side. A platform that is open and can bring the best solution survives automatically [26].
The effect and influence of the commons of information eliminate adverse events caused by the hegemonic mainstream. As the most effective means in the coming digital healthcare era, the commons of information has instantly created network neutrality on the mobiles. The network neutrality is independent of the mainstream. Therefore, only the commons of information, which is a platform with the following three points, survive:
Allow commons of information to enable fair use and fair search of information.
The commons of information release the cognitive bias set by mainstream.
The platform with fair use develop fairness of digital management and digital economics in the healthcare.
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\n\nIntechOpen is a dynamic, vibrant company, where exceptional people are achieving great things. We offer a creative, dedicated, committed, and passionate environment but never lose sight of the fact that science and discovery is exciting and rewarding. We constantly strive to ensure that members of our community can work, travel, meet world-renowned researchers and grow their own career and develop their own experiences.
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Delac received his B.Sc.E.E. degree in 2003 and is currentlypursuing a Ph.D. degree at the University of Zagreb, Faculty of Electrical Engineering andComputing. His current research interests are digital image analysis, pattern recognition andbiometrics.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Zagreb",country:{name:"Croatia"}}},{id:"557",title:"Dr.",name:"Andon",middleName:"Venelinov",surname:"Topalov",slug:"andon-topalov",fullName:"Andon Topalov",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/557/images/1927_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Andon V. Topalov received the MSc degree in Control Engineering from the Faculty of Information Systems, Technologies, and Automation at Moscow State University of Civil Engineering (MGGU) in 1979. He then received his PhD degree in Control Engineering from the Department of Automation and Remote Control at Moscow State Mining University (MGSU), Moscow, in 1984. 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Abdurakhmonov"}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"4596",title:"Plants for the Future",subtitle:null,isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"b43de0fe61cddb43f93cc0972b4299e0",slug:"plants-for-the-future",bookSignature:"Hany El-Shemy",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/4596.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"54719",title:"Prof.",name:"Hany",middleName:null,surname:"El-Shemy",slug:"hany-el-shemy",fullName:"Hany El-Shemy"}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}}],booksByTopicTotal:2,seriesByTopicCollection:[],seriesByTopicTotal:0,mostCitedChapters:[{id:"51235",doi:"10.5772/64350",title:"Advances in Plant Tolerance to Abiotic Stresses",slug:"advances-in-plant-tolerance-to-abiotic-stresses",totalDownloads:4372,totalCrossrefCites:23,totalDimensionsCites:49,abstract:"During the last 50 years, it has been shown that abiotic stresses influence plant growth and crop production greatly, and crop yields have evidently stagnated or decreased in economically important crops, where only high inputs assure high yields. The recent manifesting effects of climate change are considered to have aggravated the negative effects of abiotic stresses on plant productivity. On the other hand, the complexity of plant mechanisms controlling important traits and the limited availability of germplasm for tolerance to certain stresses have restricted genetic advances in major crops for increased yields or for improved other traits. However, some level of success has been achieved in understanding crop tolerance to abiotic stresses; for instance, identification of abscisic acid (ABA) receptors (e.g., ABA-responsive element (ABRE) binding protein/ABRE binding factor (AREB/ABF) transcription factors), and other regulons (e.g., WRKYs, MYB/MYCs, NACs, HSFs, bZIPs and nuclear factor-Y (NF-Y)), has shown potential promise to improve plant tolerance to abiotic stresses. Apart from these major regulons, studies on the post-transcriptional regulation of stress-responsive genes have provided additional opportunities for addressing the molecular basis of cellular stress responses in plants. This chapter focuses on the progress in the study of plant tolerance to abiotic stresses, and describes the major tolerance pathways and implicated signaling factors that have been identified, so far. To link basic and applied research, genes and proteins that play functional roles in mitigating abiotic stress damage are summarized and discussed.",book:{id:"5098",slug:"plant-genomics",title:"Plant Genomics",fullTitle:"Plant Genomics"},signatures:"Geoffrey Onaga and Kerstin Wydra",authors:[{id:"176967",title:"Prof.",name:"Kerstin",middleName:null,surname:"Wydra",slug:"kerstin-wydra",fullName:"Kerstin Wydra"},{id:"176968",title:"Dr.",name:"Geoffrey",middleName:null,surname:"Onaga",slug:"geoffrey-onaga",fullName:"Geoffrey Onaga"}]},{id:"50897",doi:"10.5772/64351",title:"Advances in Plant Tolerance to Biotic Stresses",slug:"advances-in-plant-tolerance-to-biotic-stresses",totalDownloads:3230,totalCrossrefCites:19,totalDimensionsCites:32,abstract:"Plants being sessile in nature encounter numerous biotic agents, including bacteria, fungi, viruses, insects, nematodes and protists. A great number of publications indicate that biotic agents significantly reduce crop productivity, although there are some biotic agents that symbiotically or synergistically co-exist with plants. Nonetheless, scientists have made significant advances in understanding the plant defence mechanisms expressed against biotic stresses. These mechanisms range from anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, genetics, development and evolution to their associated molecular dynamics. Using model plants, e.g., Arabidopsis and rice, efforts to understand these mechanisms have led to the identification of representative candidate genes, quantitative trait loci (QTLs), proteins and metabolites associated with plant defences against biotic stresses. However, there are drawbacks and insufficiencies in precisely deciphering and deploying these mechanisms, including only modest adaptability of some identified genes or QTLs to changing stress factors. Thus, more systematic efforts are needed to explore and expand the development of biotic stress resistant germplasm. In this chapter, we provided a comprehensive overview and discussed plant defence mechanisms involving molecular and cellular adaptation to biotic stresses. The latest achievements and perspective on plant molecular responses to biotic stresses, including gene expression, and targeted functional analyses of the genes expressed against biotic stresses have been presented and discussed.",book:{id:"5098",slug:"plant-genomics",title:"Plant Genomics",fullTitle:"Plant Genomics"},signatures:"Geoffrey Onaga and Kerstin Wydra",authors:[{id:"176967",title:"Prof.",name:"Kerstin",middleName:null,surname:"Wydra",slug:"kerstin-wydra",fullName:"Kerstin Wydra"}]},{id:"48940",doi:"10.5772/60873",title:"Biochemical Parameters in Tomato Fruits from Different Cultivars as Functional Foods for Agricultural, Industrial, and Pharmaceutical Uses",slug:"biochemical-parameters-in-tomato-fruits-from-different-cultivars-as-functional-foods-for-agricultura",totalDownloads:2473,totalCrossrefCites:8,totalDimensionsCites:13,abstract:"Tomato and tomato based products are an important agricultural production worldwide. More than 80 % of grown tomatoes in the worldwide are processing in the products such as tomato juice, paste, puree, catsup, sauce, and salsa. Tomato fruit is rich in phytochemicals and vitamins. Tomato nutritional value, color, fruit and flavor of their products depends mainly on lycopene, β-carotene, ascorbic acid and sugars and their ratio in fruits. Epidemiological studies and the results associated with the consumption of tomato products against the prevention of chronic diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, confirming the tomato products as a functional food, and show that lycopene and β-carotene acts as an antioxidant. In order to increase the amount of these elements in tomato fruit, it is important to evaluate and investigate tomato genotypes influence to the carotenoids accumulation. Studies have confirmed that the carotenoid content in tomato fruits is determined by genotypic characteristics. In this work the main attention will be focused on from the biochemical and physical properties in tomato of different varieties, chemical and physical properties, to functional properties of supercritical fluid extraction of lycopene from tomato processing by products supercritical fluid tomato extracts.",book:{id:"4596",slug:"plants-for-the-future",title:"Plants for the Future",fullTitle:"Plants for the Future"},signatures:"Pranas Viskelis, Audrius Radzevicius, Dalia Urbonaviciene, Jonas\nViskelis, Rasa Karkleliene and Ceslovas Bobinas",authors:[{id:"83785",title:"Prof.",name:"Pranas",middleName:null,surname:"Viskelis",slug:"pranas-viskelis",fullName:"Pranas Viskelis"},{id:"171932",title:"Dr.",name:"Dalia",middleName:null,surname:"Urbonavičienė",slug:"dalia-urbonaviciene",fullName:"Dalia Urbonavičienė"},{id:"173562",title:"Dr.",name:"Audrius",middleName:null,surname:"Radzevicius",slug:"audrius-radzevicius",fullName:"Audrius Radzevicius"},{id:"173563",title:"MSc.",name:"Jonas",middleName:null,surname:"Viskelis",slug:"jonas-viskelis",fullName:"Jonas Viskelis"},{id:"173564",title:"Dr.",name:"Rasa",middleName:null,surname:"Karkleliene",slug:"rasa-karkleliene",fullName:"Rasa Karkleliene"},{id:"173565",title:"Dr.",name:"Ceslovas",middleName:null,surname:"Bobinas",slug:"ceslovas-bobinas",fullName:"Ceslovas Bobinas"}]},{id:"49877",doi:"10.5772/62083",title:"Genomics Era for Plants and Crop Species – Advances Made and Needed Tasks Ahead",slug:"genomics-era-for-plants-and-crop-species-advances-made-and-needed-tasks-ahead",totalDownloads:2499,totalCrossrefCites:5,totalDimensionsCites:11,abstract:"Historically, unintentional plant selection and subsequent crop domestication, coupled with the need and desire to get more food and feed products, have resulted in the continuous development of plant breeding and genetics efforts. The progress made toward this goal elucidated plant genome compositions and led to decoding the full DNA sequences of plant genomes controlling the entire plant life. Plant genomics aims to develop high-throughput genome-wide-scale technologies, tools, and methodologies to elucidate the basics of genetic traits/characteristics, genetic diversities, and by-product production; to understand the phenotypic development throughout plant ontogenesis with genetic by environmental interactions; to map important loci in the genome; and to accelerate crop improvement. Plant genomics research efforts have continuously increased in the past 30 years due to the availability of cost-effective, high-throughput DNA sequencing platforms that resulted in fully sequenced 100 plant genomes with broad implications for every aspect of plant biology research and application. These technological advances, however, also have generated many unexpected challenges and grand tasks ahead. In this introductory chapter, I aimed briefly to summarize some advances made in plant genomics studies in the past three decades, plant genome sequencing efforts, current state-of-the-art technological developments of genomics era, and some of current grand challenges and needed tasks ahead in the genomics and post-genomics era. I also highlighted the related book chapters contributed by different authors in this book.",book:{id:"5098",slug:"plant-genomics",title:"Plant Genomics",fullTitle:"Plant Genomics"},signatures:"Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov",authors:[{id:"213344",title:"Prof.",name:"Ibrokhim Y.",middleName:null,surname:"Abdurakhmonov",slug:"ibrokhim-y.-abdurakhmonov",fullName:"Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov"}]},{id:"50295",doi:"10.5772/63361",title:"Genomics of Salinity Tolerance in Plants",slug:"genomics-of-salinity-tolerance-in-plants",totalDownloads:2700,totalCrossrefCites:5,totalDimensionsCites:10,abstract:"Plants are frequently exposed to wide range of harsh environmental factors, such as drought, salinity, cold, heat, and insect attack. Being sessile in nature, plants have developed different strategies to adapt and grow under rapidly changing environments. These strategies involve rearrangements at the molecular level starting from transcription, regulation of mRNA processing, translation, and protein modification or its turnover. Plants show stress-specific regulation of transcription that affects their transcriptome under stress conditions. The transcriptionally regulated genes have different roles under stress response. Generally, seedling and reproductive stages are more susceptible to stress. Thus, stress response studies during these growth stages reveal novel differentially regulated genes or proteins with important functions in plant stress adaptation. Exploiting the functional genomics and bioinformatics studies paved the way in understanding the relationship between genotype and phenotype of an organism suffering from environmental stress. Future research programs can be focused on the development of transgenic plants with enhanced stress tolerance in field conditions based upon the outcome of genomic approaches and knowing the mystery of nucleotides sequences hidden in cells.",book:{id:"5098",slug:"plant-genomics",title:"Plant Genomics",fullTitle:"Plant Genomics"},signatures:"Abdul Qayyum Rao, Salah ud Din, Sidra Akhtar, Muhammad Bilal\nSarwar, Mukhtar Ahmed, Bushra Rashid, Muhammad Azmat Ullah\nKhan, Uzma Qaisar, Ahmad Ali Shahid, Idrees Ahmad Nasir and\nTayyab Husnain",authors:[{id:"83285",title:"Dr.",name:"Abdul Qayyum",middleName:null,surname:"Rao",slug:"abdul-qayyum-rao",fullName:"Abdul Qayyum Rao"},{id:"147560",title:"Prof.",name:"Tayyab",middleName:null,surname:"Husnain",slug:"tayyab-husnain",fullName:"Tayyab Husnain"},{id:"179282",title:"Mr.",name:"Salah Ud",middleName:null,surname:"Din",slug:"salah-ud-din",fullName:"Salah Ud Din"},{id:"179283",title:"Ms.",name:"Sidra",middleName:null,surname:"Akhtar",slug:"sidra-akhtar",fullName:"Sidra Akhtar"},{id:"179284",title:"Mr.",name:"Bilal",middleName:null,surname:"Sarwar",slug:"bilal-sarwar",fullName:"Bilal Sarwar"},{id:"179285",title:"Mr.",name:"Mukhtar",middleName:null,surname:"Ahmed",slug:"mukhtar-ahmed",fullName:"Mukhtar Ahmed"},{id:"179286",title:"Dr.",name:"Uzma",middleName:null,surname:"Qaisar",slug:"uzma-qaisar",fullName:"Uzma Qaisar"},{id:"179287",title:"Dr.",name:"Bushra",middleName:null,surname:"Rashid",slug:"bushra-rashid",fullName:"Bushra Rashid"},{id:"179288",title:"Dr.",name:"Ahmad Ali",middleName:null,surname:"Shahid",slug:"ahmad-ali-shahid",fullName:"Ahmad Ali Shahid"},{id:"179289",title:"Dr.",name:"Idrees Ahmad",middleName:null,surname:"Nasir",slug:"idrees-ahmad-nasir",fullName:"Idrees Ahmad Nasir"}]}],mostDownloadedChaptersLast30Days:[{id:"48920",title:"Molecular Farming in Plants",slug:"molecular-farming-in-plants",totalDownloads:3344,totalCrossrefCites:4,totalDimensionsCites:8,abstract:"Plant molecular farming describes the production of recombinant proteins and other secondary metabolites in plants. This technology depends on a genetic transformation of plants that can be accomplished by the methods of stable gene transfer, such as gene transfer to nuclei and chloroplasts, and unstable transfer methods like viral vectors. An increasing quest for biomedicines has coincided with the high costs and inefficient production systems (bacterial, microbial eukaryotes, mammalian cells, insect cells, and transgenic animals). Therefore, transgenic plants as the bioreactors of a new generation have been the subject of considerable attention with respect to their advantages, such as the safety of recombinant proteins (antibodies, enzymes, vaccines, growth factors, etc.), and their potential for the large-scale and low-cost production. However, the application of transgenic plants can entail some worrying concerns, namely the amplification and diffusion of transgene, accumulation of recombinant protein toxicity in the environment, contamination of food chain, and costs of subsequent processing. The given threats need to be the subject of further caution and investigation to generate valuable products, such as enzymes, pharmaceutical proteins, and biomedicines by the safest, cheapest, and most efficient methods.",book:{id:"4596",slug:"plants-for-the-future",title:"Plants for the Future",fullTitle:"Plants for the Future"},signatures:"Tarinejad Alireza and Rahimi Esfanjani Nader",authors:[{id:"173317",title:"Dr.",name:"Alireza",middleName:null,surname:"Tarinejad",slug:"alireza-tarinejad",fullName:"Alireza Tarinejad"},{id:"174002",title:"M.Sc.",name:"Nader",middleName:null,surname:"Rahimi Esfanjani",slug:"nader-rahimi-esfanjani",fullName:"Nader Rahimi Esfanjani"}]},{id:"48940",title:"Biochemical Parameters in Tomato Fruits from Different Cultivars as Functional Foods for Agricultural, Industrial, and Pharmaceutical Uses",slug:"biochemical-parameters-in-tomato-fruits-from-different-cultivars-as-functional-foods-for-agricultura",totalDownloads:2471,totalCrossrefCites:8,totalDimensionsCites:13,abstract:"Tomato and tomato based products are an important agricultural production worldwide. More than 80 % of grown tomatoes in the worldwide are processing in the products such as tomato juice, paste, puree, catsup, sauce, and salsa. Tomato fruit is rich in phytochemicals and vitamins. Tomato nutritional value, color, fruit and flavor of their products depends mainly on lycopene, β-carotene, ascorbic acid and sugars and their ratio in fruits. Epidemiological studies and the results associated with the consumption of tomato products against the prevention of chronic diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, confirming the tomato products as a functional food, and show that lycopene and β-carotene acts as an antioxidant. In order to increase the amount of these elements in tomato fruit, it is important to evaluate and investigate tomato genotypes influence to the carotenoids accumulation. Studies have confirmed that the carotenoid content in tomato fruits is determined by genotypic characteristics. In this work the main attention will be focused on from the biochemical and physical properties in tomato of different varieties, chemical and physical properties, to functional properties of supercritical fluid extraction of lycopene from tomato processing by products supercritical fluid tomato extracts.",book:{id:"4596",slug:"plants-for-the-future",title:"Plants for the Future",fullTitle:"Plants for the Future"},signatures:"Pranas Viskelis, Audrius Radzevicius, Dalia Urbonaviciene, Jonas\nViskelis, Rasa Karkleliene and Ceslovas Bobinas",authors:[{id:"83785",title:"Prof.",name:"Pranas",middleName:null,surname:"Viskelis",slug:"pranas-viskelis",fullName:"Pranas Viskelis"},{id:"171932",title:"Dr.",name:"Dalia",middleName:null,surname:"Urbonavičienė",slug:"dalia-urbonaviciene",fullName:"Dalia Urbonavičienė"},{id:"173562",title:"Dr.",name:"Audrius",middleName:null,surname:"Radzevicius",slug:"audrius-radzevicius",fullName:"Audrius Radzevicius"},{id:"173563",title:"MSc.",name:"Jonas",middleName:null,surname:"Viskelis",slug:"jonas-viskelis",fullName:"Jonas Viskelis"},{id:"173564",title:"Dr.",name:"Rasa",middleName:null,surname:"Karkleliene",slug:"rasa-karkleliene",fullName:"Rasa Karkleliene"},{id:"173565",title:"Dr.",name:"Ceslovas",middleName:null,surname:"Bobinas",slug:"ceslovas-bobinas",fullName:"Ceslovas Bobinas"}]},{id:"51235",title:"Advances in Plant Tolerance to Abiotic Stresses",slug:"advances-in-plant-tolerance-to-abiotic-stresses",totalDownloads:4371,totalCrossrefCites:23,totalDimensionsCites:49,abstract:"During the last 50 years, it has been shown that abiotic stresses influence plant growth and crop production greatly, and crop yields have evidently stagnated or decreased in economically important crops, where only high inputs assure high yields. The recent manifesting effects of climate change are considered to have aggravated the negative effects of abiotic stresses on plant productivity. On the other hand, the complexity of plant mechanisms controlling important traits and the limited availability of germplasm for tolerance to certain stresses have restricted genetic advances in major crops for increased yields or for improved other traits. However, some level of success has been achieved in understanding crop tolerance to abiotic stresses; for instance, identification of abscisic acid (ABA) receptors (e.g., ABA-responsive element (ABRE) binding protein/ABRE binding factor (AREB/ABF) transcription factors), and other regulons (e.g., WRKYs, MYB/MYCs, NACs, HSFs, bZIPs and nuclear factor-Y (NF-Y)), has shown potential promise to improve plant tolerance to abiotic stresses. Apart from these major regulons, studies on the post-transcriptional regulation of stress-responsive genes have provided additional opportunities for addressing the molecular basis of cellular stress responses in plants. This chapter focuses on the progress in the study of plant tolerance to abiotic stresses, and describes the major tolerance pathways and implicated signaling factors that have been identified, so far. To link basic and applied research, genes and proteins that play functional roles in mitigating abiotic stress damage are summarized and discussed.",book:{id:"5098",slug:"plant-genomics",title:"Plant Genomics",fullTitle:"Plant Genomics"},signatures:"Geoffrey Onaga and Kerstin Wydra",authors:[{id:"176967",title:"Prof.",name:"Kerstin",middleName:null,surname:"Wydra",slug:"kerstin-wydra",fullName:"Kerstin Wydra"},{id:"176968",title:"Dr.",name:"Geoffrey",middleName:null,surname:"Onaga",slug:"geoffrey-onaga",fullName:"Geoffrey Onaga"}]},{id:"49554",title:"The Extraordinary Nature of RNA Interference in Understanding Gene Downregulation Mechanism in Plants",slug:"the-extraordinary-nature-of-rna-interference-in-understanding-gene-downregulation-mechanism-in-plant",totalDownloads:2358,totalCrossrefCites:2,totalDimensionsCites:2,abstract:"Gene silencing (also known as ribonucleic acid [RNA] interference [RNAi] or interfering RNA) was first recognized in plants and is considered one of the most significant discoveries in molecular biology in the last several years. These short-chain ribonucleic acid molecules regulate eukaryotic gene expression. The phenomenon involves a process that promotes RNA transcripts degradation through complementarity between RNA molecules and RNAi transcripts, resulting in the reduction of their translation levels. There are two principal classes of regulatory RNA molecules: small interfering RNAs (siRNA) and microRNAs (miRNA). Both are generated from the cleavage of double-stranded self-complementary RNA hairpins by a DICER enzyme that belongs to the RNase III family. Small RNAs (of about 21–24 nucleotides in size) guide specific effector Argonaute protein to a target nucleotide sequence by complementary base pairing. Thereby, the effector protein complex downregulates the expression of RNA or DNA targets. In plants, cis-regulatory RNAi sequences are involved in defense mechanisms against antagonistic organisms and transposition events, while trans-regulatory sequences participate in growth-related gene expression. siRNA also performs neutral antiviral defense mechanisms and adaptive stress responses. This document is an attempt to scrutinize the RNAi nature in understanding gene downregulation mechanism in plants and some technical applications.",book:{id:"5098",slug:"plant-genomics",title:"Plant Genomics",fullTitle:"Plant Genomics"},signatures:"Jorge Ricaño-Rodríguez, Jacel Adame-García, Silvia Portilla-\nVázquez, José M. Ramos-Prado and Enrique Hipólito-Romero",authors:[{id:"176624",title:"Dr.",name:"Jorge",middleName:null,surname:"Ricaño-Rodríguez",slug:"jorge-ricano-rodriguez",fullName:"Jorge Ricaño-Rodríguez"},{id:"176991",title:"Dr.",name:"Jacel",middleName:null,surname:"Adame-García",slug:"jacel-adame-garcia",fullName:"Jacel Adame-García"},{id:"176992",title:"Dr.",name:"Enrique",middleName:null,surname:"Hipólito-Romero1",slug:"enrique-hipolito-romero1",fullName:"Enrique Hipólito-Romero1"},{id:"176993",title:"Dr.",name:"José María",middleName:null,surname:"Ramos-Prado",slug:"jose-maria-ramos-prado",fullName:"José María Ramos-Prado"},{id:"177760",title:"Dr.",name:"Silvia",middleName:null,surname:"Portilla-Vázquez",slug:"silvia-portilla-vazquez",fullName:"Silvia Portilla-Vázquez"}]},{id:"50295",title:"Genomics of Salinity Tolerance in Plants",slug:"genomics-of-salinity-tolerance-in-plants",totalDownloads:2700,totalCrossrefCites:5,totalDimensionsCites:10,abstract:"Plants are frequently exposed to wide range of harsh environmental factors, such as drought, salinity, cold, heat, and insect attack. Being sessile in nature, plants have developed different strategies to adapt and grow under rapidly changing environments. These strategies involve rearrangements at the molecular level starting from transcription, regulation of mRNA processing, translation, and protein modification or its turnover. Plants show stress-specific regulation of transcription that affects their transcriptome under stress conditions. The transcriptionally regulated genes have different roles under stress response. Generally, seedling and reproductive stages are more susceptible to stress. Thus, stress response studies during these growth stages reveal novel differentially regulated genes or proteins with important functions in plant stress adaptation. Exploiting the functional genomics and bioinformatics studies paved the way in understanding the relationship between genotype and phenotype of an organism suffering from environmental stress. Future research programs can be focused on the development of transgenic plants with enhanced stress tolerance in field conditions based upon the outcome of genomic approaches and knowing the mystery of nucleotides sequences hidden in cells.",book:{id:"5098",slug:"plant-genomics",title:"Plant Genomics",fullTitle:"Plant Genomics"},signatures:"Abdul Qayyum Rao, Salah ud Din, Sidra Akhtar, Muhammad Bilal\nSarwar, Mukhtar Ahmed, Bushra Rashid, Muhammad Azmat Ullah\nKhan, Uzma Qaisar, Ahmad Ali Shahid, Idrees Ahmad Nasir and\nTayyab Husnain",authors:[{id:"83285",title:"Dr.",name:"Abdul Qayyum",middleName:null,surname:"Rao",slug:"abdul-qayyum-rao",fullName:"Abdul Qayyum Rao"},{id:"147560",title:"Prof.",name:"Tayyab",middleName:null,surname:"Husnain",slug:"tayyab-husnain",fullName:"Tayyab Husnain"},{id:"179282",title:"Mr.",name:"Salah Ud",middleName:null,surname:"Din",slug:"salah-ud-din",fullName:"Salah Ud Din"},{id:"179283",title:"Ms.",name:"Sidra",middleName:null,surname:"Akhtar",slug:"sidra-akhtar",fullName:"Sidra Akhtar"},{id:"179284",title:"Mr.",name:"Bilal",middleName:null,surname:"Sarwar",slug:"bilal-sarwar",fullName:"Bilal Sarwar"},{id:"179285",title:"Mr.",name:"Mukhtar",middleName:null,surname:"Ahmed",slug:"mukhtar-ahmed",fullName:"Mukhtar Ahmed"},{id:"179286",title:"Dr.",name:"Uzma",middleName:null,surname:"Qaisar",slug:"uzma-qaisar",fullName:"Uzma Qaisar"},{id:"179287",title:"Dr.",name:"Bushra",middleName:null,surname:"Rashid",slug:"bushra-rashid",fullName:"Bushra Rashid"},{id:"179288",title:"Dr.",name:"Ahmad Ali",middleName:null,surname:"Shahid",slug:"ahmad-ali-shahid",fullName:"Ahmad Ali Shahid"},{id:"179289",title:"Dr.",name:"Idrees Ahmad",middleName:null,surname:"Nasir",slug:"idrees-ahmad-nasir",fullName:"Idrees Ahmad Nasir"}]}],onlineFirstChaptersFilter:{topicId:"365",limit:6,offset:0},onlineFirstChaptersCollection:[],onlineFirstChaptersTotal:0},preDownload:{success:null,errors:{}},subscriptionForm:{success:null,errors:{}},aboutIntechopen:{},privacyPolicy:{},peerReviewing:{},howOpenAccessPublishingWithIntechopenWorks:{},sponsorshipBooks:{sponsorshipBooks:[],offset:8,limit:8,total:0},allSeries:{pteSeriesList:[{id:"14",title:"Artificial Intelligence",numberOfPublishedBooks:9,numberOfPublishedChapters:90,numberOfOpenTopics:6,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2633-1403",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79920",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"7",title:"Biomedical 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",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series/covers/3.jpg",latestPublicationDate:"August 12th, 2022",hasOnlineFirst:!0,numberOfPublishedBooks:9,editor:{id:"419588",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Sergio",middleName:"Alexandre",surname:"Gehrke",slug:"sergio-gehrke",fullName:"Sergio Gehrke",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y000038WgMKQA0/Profile_Picture_2022-06-02T11:44:20.jpg",biography:"Dr. Sergio Alexandre Gehrke is a doctorate holder in two fields. The first is a Ph.D. in Cellular and Molecular Biology from the Pontificia Catholic University, Porto Alegre, Brazil, in 2010 and the other is an International Ph.D. in Bioengineering from the Universidad Miguel Hernandez, Elche/Alicante, Spain, obtained in 2020. In 2018, he completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Materials Engineering in the NUCLEMAT of the Pontificia Catholic University, Porto Alegre, Brazil. He is currently the Director of the Postgraduate Program in Implantology of the Bioface/UCAM/PgO (Montevideo, Uruguay), Director of the Cathedra of Biotechnology of the Catholic University of Murcia (Murcia, Spain), an Extraordinary Full Professor of the Catholic University of Murcia (Murcia, Spain) as well as the Director of the private center of research Biotecnos – Technology and Science (Montevideo, Uruguay). Applied biomaterials, cellular and molecular biology, and dental implants are among his research interests. He has published several original papers in renowned journals. In addition, he is also a Collaborating Professor in several Postgraduate programs at different universities all over the world.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Spain"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null},subseries:{paginationCount:2,paginationItems:[{id:"1",title:"Oral Health",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/1.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!0,annualVolume:11397,editor:{id:"173955",title:"Prof.",name:"Sandra",middleName:null,surname:"Marinho",slug:"sandra-marinho",fullName:"Sandra Marinho",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRGYMQA4/Profile_Picture_2022-06-01T13:22:41.png",biography:"Dr. Sandra A. Marinho is an Associate Professor and Brazilian researcher at the State University of Paraíba (Universidade Estadual da Paraíba- UEPB), Campus VIII, located in Araruna, state of Paraíba since 2011. She holds a degree in Dentistry from the Federal University of Alfenas (UNIFAL), while her specialization and professional improvement in Stomatology took place at Hospital Heliopolis (São Paulo, SP). Her qualifications are: a specialist in Dental Imaging and Radiology, Master in Dentistry (Periodontics) from the University of São Paulo (FORP-USP, Ribeirão Preto, SP), and Doctor (Ph.D.) in Dentistry (Stomatology Clinic) from Hospital São Lucas of the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul (HSL-PUCRS, Porto Alegre, RS). She held a postdoctoral internship at the Federal University from Jequitinhonha and Mucuri Valleys (UFVJM, Diamantina, MG). She is currently a member of the Brazilian Society for Dental Research (SBPqO) and the Brazilian Society of Stomatology and Pathology (SOBEP). Dr. Marinho's experience in Dentistry mainly covers the following subjects: oral diagnosis, oral radiology; oral medicine; lesions and oral infections; oral pathology, laser therapy and epidemiological studies.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"State University of Paraíba",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Brazil"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null},{id:"2",title:"Prosthodontics and Implant Dentistry",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/2.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!0,annualVolume:11398,editor:{id:"179568",title:"Associate Prof.",name:"Wen Lin",middleName:null,surname:"Chai",slug:"wen-lin-chai",fullName:"Wen Lin Chai",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRHGAQA4/Profile_Picture_2022-05-23T14:31:12.png",biography:"Professor Dr. Chai Wen Lin is currently a lecturer at the Department of Restorative Dentistry, Faculty of Dentistry of the University of Malaya. She obtained a Master of Dental Science in 2006 and a Ph.D. in 2011. Her Ph.D. research work on the soft tissue-implant interface at the University of Sheffield has yielded several important publications in the key implant journals. She was awarded an Excellent Exchange Award by the University of Sheffield which gave her the opportunity to work at the famous Faculty of Dentistry of the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, under the tutelage of Prof. Peter Thomsen. In 2016, she was appointed as a visiting scholar at UCLA, USA, with attachment in Hospital Dentistry, and involvement in research work related to zirconia implant. In 2016, her contribution to dentistry was recognized by the Royal College of Surgeon of Edinburgh with her being awarded a Fellowship in Dental Surgery. She has authored numerous papers published both in local and international journals. She was the Editor of the Malaysian Dental Journal for several years. Her main research interests are implant-soft tissue interface, zirconia implant, photofunctionalization, 3D-oral mucosal model and pulpal regeneration.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Malaya",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Malaysia"}}},editorTwo:{id:"479686",title:"Dr.",name:"Ghee Seong",middleName:null,surname:"Lim",slug:"ghee-seong-lim",fullName:"Ghee Seong Lim",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y00003ScjLZQAZ/Profile_Picture_2022-06-08T14:17:06.png",biography:"Assoc. Prof Dr. Lim Ghee Seong graduated with a Bachelor of Dental Surgery from University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur in 2008. He then pursued his Master in Clinical Dentistry, specializing in Restorative Dentistry at Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK, where he graduated with distinction. He has also been awarded the International Training Fellowship (Restorative Dentistry) from the Royal College of Surgeons. His passion for teaching then led him to join the faculty of dentistry at University Malaya and he has since became a valuable lecturer and clinical specialist in the Department of Restorative Dentistry. He is currently the removable prosthodontic undergraduate year 3 coordinator, head of the undergraduate module on occlusion and a member of the multidisciplinary team for the TMD clinic. He has previous membership in the British Society for Restorative Dentistry, the Malaysian Association of Aesthetic Dentistry and he is currently a lifetime member of the Malaysian Association for Prosthodontics. Currently, he is also the examiner for the Restorative Specialty Membership Examinations, Royal College of Surgeons, England. He has authored and co-authored handful of both local and international journal articles. 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He has both an MS and Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering. He was previously a research scientist at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) and visiting professor and researcher at the University of North Dakota. He is currently working in artificial intelligence and its applications in medical signal processing. In addition, he is using digital signal processing in medical imaging and speech processing. Dr. Asadpour has developed brain-computer interfacing algorithms and has published books, book chapters, and several journal and conference papers in this field and other areas of intelligent signal processing. 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Dr. Gaiceanu is a member of the National Council for Attesting Titles, Diplomas and Certificates, an expert of the Executive Agency for Higher Education, Research Funding, and a member of the Senate of the Dunarea de Jos University of Galati. He has been the head of the Integrated Energy Conversion Systems and Advanced Control of Complex Processes Research Center, Romania, since 2016. He has conducted several projects in power converter systems for electrical drives, power quality, PEM and SOFC fuel cell power converters for utilities, electric vehicles, and marine applications with the Department of Regulation and Control, SIEI S.pA. (2002–2004) and the Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy (2002–2004, 2006–2007). He is a member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and cofounder-member of the IEEE Power Electronics Romanian Chapter. He is a guest editor at Energies and an academic book editor for IntechOpen. He is also a member of the editorial boards of the Journal of Electrical Engineering, Electronics, Control and Computer Science and Sustainability. Dr. Gaiceanu has been General Chairman of the IEEE International Symposium on Electrical and Electronics Engineering in the last six editions.",institutionString:'"Dunarea de Jos" University of Galati',institution:{name:'"Dunarea de Jos" University of Galati',country:{name:"Romania"}}},{id:"4519",title:"Prof.",name:"Jaydip",middleName:null,surname:"Sen",slug:"jaydip-sen",fullName:"Jaydip Sen",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/4519/images/system/4519.jpeg",biography:"Jaydip Sen is associated with Praxis Business School, Kolkata, India, as a professor in the Department of Data Science. His research areas include security and privacy issues in computing and communication, intrusion detection systems, machine learning, deep learning, and artificial intelligence in the financial domain. He has more than 200 publications in reputed international journals, refereed conference proceedings, and 20 book chapters in books published by internationally renowned publishing houses, such as Springer, CRC press, IGI Global, etc. Currently, he is serving on the editorial board of the prestigious journal Frontiers in Communications and Networks and in the technical program committees of a number of high-ranked international conferences organized by the IEEE, USA, and the ACM, USA. He has been listed among the top 2% of scientists in the world for the last three consecutive years, 2019 to 2021 as per studies conducted by the Stanford University, USA.",institutionString:"Praxis Business School",institution:null},{id:"320071",title:"Dr.",name:"Sidra",middleName:null,surname:"Mehtab",slug:"sidra-mehtab",fullName:"Sidra Mehtab",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y00002v6KHoQAM/Profile_Picture_1584512086360",biography:"Sidra Mehtab has completed her BS with honors in Physics from Calcutta University, India in 2018. She has done MS in Data Science and Analytics from Maulana Abul Kalam Azad University of Technology (MAKAUT), Kolkata, India in 2020. Her research areas include Econometrics, Time Series Analysis, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Artificial Intelligence, and Computer and Network Security with a particular focus on Cyber Security Analytics. Ms. Mehtab has published seven papers in international conferences and one of her papers has been accepted for publication in a reputable international journal. She has won the best paper awards in two prestigious international conferences – BAICONF 2019, and ICADCML 2021, organized in the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore, India in December 2019, and SOA University, Bhubaneswar, India in January 2021. Besides, Ms. Mehtab has also published two book chapters in two books. Seven of her book chapters will be published in a volume shortly in 2021 by Cambridge Scholars’ Press, UK. Currently, she is working as the joint editor of two edited volumes on Time Series Analysis and Forecasting to be published in the first half of 2021 by an international house. Currently, she is working as a Data Scientist with an MNC in Delhi, India.",institutionString:"NSHM College of Management and Technology",institution:{name:"Association for Computing Machinery",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"226240",title:"Dr.",name:"Andri Irfan",middleName:null,surname:"Rifai",slug:"andri-irfan-rifai",fullName:"Andri Irfan Rifai",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/226240/images/7412_n.jpg",biography:"Andri IRFAN is a Senior Lecturer of Civil Engineering and Planning. He completed the PhD at the Universitas Indonesia & Universidade do Minho with Sandwich Program Scholarship from the Directorate General of Higher Education and LPDP scholarship. He has been teaching for more than 19 years and much active to applied his knowledge in the project construction in Indonesia. His research interest ranges from pavement management system to advanced data mining techniques for transportation engineering. He has published more than 50 papers in journals and 2 books.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Universitas Internasional Batam",country:{name:"Indonesia"}}},{id:"314576",title:"Dr.",name:"Ibai",middleName:null,surname:"Laña",slug:"ibai-lana",fullName:"Ibai Laña",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/314576/images/system/314576.jpg",biography:"Dr. Ibai Laña works at TECNALIA as a data analyst. He received his Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence from the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Spain, in 2018. He is currently a senior researcher at TECNALIA. His research interests fall within the intersection of intelligent transportation systems, machine learning, traffic data analysis, and data science. He has dealt with urban traffic forecasting problems, applying machine learning models and evolutionary algorithms. He has experience in origin-destination matrix estimation or point of interest and trajectory detection. Working with large volumes of data has given him a good command of big data processing tools and NoSQL databases. He has also been a visiting scholar at the Knowledge Engineering and Discovery Research Institute, Auckland University of Technology.",institutionString:"TECNALIA Research & Innovation",institution:{name:"Tecnalia",country:{name:"Spain"}}},{id:"314575",title:"Dr.",name:"Jesus",middleName:null,surname:"L. Lobo",slug:"jesus-l.-lobo",fullName:"Jesus L. Lobo",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/314575/images/system/314575.png",biography:"Dr. Jesús López is currently based in Bilbao (Spain) working at TECNALIA as Artificial Intelligence Research Scientist. In most cases, a project idea or a new research line needs to be investigated to see if it is good enough to take into production or to focus on it. That is exactly what he does, diving into Machine Learning algorithms and technologies to help TECNALIA to decide whether something is great in theory or will actually impact on the product or processes of its projects. So, he is expert at framing experiments, developing hypotheses, and proving whether they’re true or not, in order to investigate fundamental problems with a longer time horizon. He is also able to design and develop PoCs and system prototypes in simulation. He has participated in several national and internacional R&D projects.\n\nAs another relevant part of his everyday research work, he usually publishes his findings in reputed scientific refereed journals and international conferences, occasionally acting as reviewer and Programme Commitee member. Concretely, since 2018 he has published 9 JCR (8 Q1) journal papers, 9 conference papers (e.g. ECML PKDD 2021), and he has co-edited a book. He is also active in popular science writing data science stories for reputed blogs (KDNuggets, TowardsDataScience, Naukas). Besides, he has recently embarked on mentoring programmes as mentor, and has also worked as data science trainer.",institutionString:"TECNALIA Research & Innovation",institution:{name:"Tecnalia",country:{name:"Spain"}}},{id:"103779",title:"Prof.",name:"Yalcin",middleName:null,surname:"Isler",slug:"yalcin-isler",fullName:"Yalcin Isler",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRyQ8QAK/Profile_Picture_1628834958734",biography:"Yalcin Isler (1971 - Burdur / Turkey) received the B.Sc. degree in the Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering from Anadolu University, Eskisehir, Turkey, in 1993, the M.Sc. degree from the Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, Suleyman Demirel University, Isparta, Turkey, in 1996, the Ph.D. degree from the Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir, Turkey, in 2009, and the Competence of Associate Professorship from the Turkish Interuniversity Council in 2019.\n\nHe was Lecturer at Burdur Vocational School in Suleyman Demirel University (1993-2000, Burdur / Turkey), Software Engineer (2000-2002, Izmir / Turkey), Research Assistant in Bulent Ecevit University (2002-2003, Zonguldak / Turkey), Research Assistant in Dokuz Eylul University (2003-2010, Izmir / Turkey), Assistant Professor at the Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering in Bulent Ecevit University (2010-2012, Zonguldak / Turkey), Assistant Professor at the Department of Biomedical Engineering in Izmir Katip Celebi University (2012-2019, Izmir / Turkey). He is an Associate Professor at the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Izmir Katip Celebi University, Izmir / Turkey, since 2019. In addition to academics, he has also founded Islerya Medical and Information Technologies Company, Izmir / Turkey, since 2017.\n\nHis main research interests cover biomedical signal processing, pattern recognition, medical device design, programming, and embedded systems. He has many scientific papers and participated in several projects in these study fields. He was an IEEE Student Member (2009-2011) and IEEE Member (2011-2014) and has been IEEE Senior Member since 2014.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Izmir Kâtip Çelebi University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"339677",title:"Dr.",name:"Mrinmoy",middleName:null,surname:"Roy",slug:"mrinmoy-roy",fullName:"Mrinmoy Roy",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/339677/images/16768_n.jpg",biography:"An accomplished Sales & Marketing professional with 12 years of cross-functional experience in well-known organisations such as CIPLA, LUPIN, GLENMARK, ASTRAZENECA across different segment of Sales & Marketing, International Business, Institutional Business, Product Management, Strategic Marketing of HIV, Oncology, Derma, Respiratory, Anti-Diabetic, Nutraceutical & Stomatological Product Portfolio and Generic as well as Chronic Critical Care Portfolio. A First Class MBA in International Business & Strategic Marketing, B.Pharm, D.Pharm, Google Certified Digital Marketing Professional. Qualified PhD Candidate in Operations and Management with special focus on Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning adoption, analysis and use in Healthcare, Hospital & Pharma Domain. Seasoned with diverse therapy area of Pharmaceutical Sales & Marketing ranging from generating revenue through generating prescriptions, launching new products, and making them big brands with continuous strategy execution at the Physician and Patients level. Moved from Sales to Marketing and Business Development for 3.5 years in South East Asian Market operating from Manila, Philippines. Came back to India and handled and developed Brands such as Gluconorm, Lupisulin, Supracal, Absolut Woman, Hemozink, Fabiflu (For COVID 19), and many more. In my previous assignment I used to develop and execute strategies on Sales & Marketing, Commercialization & Business Development for Institution and Corporate Hospital Business portfolio of Oncology Therapy Area for AstraZeneca Pharma India Ltd. Being a Research Scholar and Student of ‘Operations Research & Management: Artificial Intelligence’ I published several pioneer research papers and book chapters on the same in Internationally reputed journals and Books indexed in Scopus, Springer and Ei Compendex, Google Scholar etc. Currently, I am launching PGDM Pharmaceutical Management Program in IIHMR Bangalore and spearheading the course curriculum and structure of the same. I am interested in Collaboration for Healthcare Innovation, Pharma AI Innovation, Future trend in Marketing and Management with incubation on Healthcare, Healthcare IT startups, AI-ML Modelling and Healthcare Algorithm based training module development. I am also an affiliated member of the Institute of Management Consultant of India, looking forward to Healthcare, Healthcare IT and Innovation, Pharma and Hospital Management Consulting works.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Lovely Professional University",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"310576",title:"Prof.",name:"Erick Giovani",middleName:null,surname:"Sperandio Nascimento",slug:"erick-giovani-sperandio-nascimento",fullName:"Erick Giovani Sperandio Nascimento",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://intech-files.s3.amazonaws.com/0033Y00002pDKxDQAW/ProfilePicture%202022-06-20%2019%3A57%3A24.788",biography:"Prof. Erick Sperandio is the Lead Researcher and professor of Artificial Intelligence (AI) at SENAI CIMATEC, Bahia, Brazil, also working with Computational Modeling (CM) and HPC. He holds a PhD in Environmental Engineering in the area of Atmospheric Computational Modeling, a Master in Informatics in the field of Computational Intelligence and Graduated in Computer Science from UFES. He currently coordinates, leads and participates in R&D projects in the areas of AI, computational modeling and supercomputing applied to different areas such as Oil and Gas, Health, Advanced Manufacturing, Renewable Energies and Atmospheric Sciences, advising undergraduate, master's and doctoral students. He is the Lead Researcher at SENAI CIMATEC's Reference Center on Artificial Intelligence. In addition, he is a Certified Instructor and University Ambassador of the NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute (DLI) in the areas of Deep Learning, Computer Vision, Natural Language Processing and Recommender Systems, and Principal Investigator of the NVIDIA/CIMATEC AI Joint Lab, the first in Latin America within the NVIDIA AI Technology Center (NVAITC) worldwide program. He also works as a researcher at the Supercomputing Center for Industrial Innovation (CS2i) and at the SENAI Institute of Innovation for Automation (ISI Automação), both from SENAI CIMATEC. He is a member and vice-coordinator of the Basic Board of Scientific-Technological Advice and Evaluation, in the area of Innovation, of the Foundation for Research Support of the State of Bahia (FAPESB). He serves as Technology Transfer Coordinator and one of the Principal Investigators at the National Applied Research Center in Artificial Intelligence (CPA-IA) of SENAI CIMATEC, focusing on Industry, being one of the six CPA-IA in Brazil approved by MCTI / FAPESP / CGI.br. He also participates as one of the representatives of Brazil in the BRICS Innovation Collaboration Working Group on HPC, ICT and AI. He is the coordinator of the Work Group of the Axis 5 - Workforce and Training - of the Brazilian Strategy for Artificial Intelligence (EBIA), and member of the MCTI/EMBRAPII AI Innovation Network Training Committee. He is the coordinator, by SENAI CIMATEC, of the Artificial Intelligence Reference Network of the State of Bahia (REDE BAH.IA). He leads the working group of experts representing Brazil in the Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence (GPAI), on the theme \"AI and the Pandemic Response\".",institutionString:"Manufacturing and Technology Integrated Campus – SENAI CIMATEC",institution:null},{id:"1063",title:"Prof.",name:"Constantin",middleName:null,surname:"Volosencu",slug:"constantin-volosencu",fullName:"Constantin Volosencu",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/1063/images/system/1063.png",biography:"Prof. Dr. Constantin Voloşencu graduated as an engineer from\nPolitehnica University of Timișoara, Romania, where he also\nobtained a doctorate degree. He is currently a full professor in\nthe Department of Automation and Applied Informatics at the\nsame university. Dr. Voloşencu is the author of ten books, seven\nbook chapters, and more than 160 papers published in journals\nand conference proceedings. He has also edited twelve books and\nhas twenty-seven patents to his name. He is a manager of research grants, editor in\nchief and member of international journal editorial boards, a former plenary speaker, a member of scientific committees, and chair at international conferences. His\nresearch is in the fields of control systems, control of electric drives, fuzzy control\nsystems, neural network applications, fault detection and diagnosis, sensor network\napplications, monitoring of distributed parameter systems, and power ultrasound\napplications. He has developed automation equipment for machine tools, spooling\nmachines, high-power ultrasound processes, and more.",institutionString:'"Politechnica" University Timişoara',institution:null},{id:"221364",title:"Dr.",name:"Eneko",middleName:null,surname:"Osaba",slug:"eneko-osaba",fullName:"Eneko Osaba",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/221364/images/system/221364.jpg",biography:"Dr. Eneko Osaba works at TECNALIA as a senior researcher. He obtained his Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence in 2015. He has participated in more than twenty-five local and European research projects, and in the publication of more than 130 papers. He has performed several stays at universities in the United Kingdom, Italy, and Malta. Dr. Osaba has served as a program committee member in more than forty international conferences and participated in organizing activities in more than ten international conferences. He is a member of the editorial board of the International Journal of Artificial Intelligence, Data in Brief, and Journal of Advanced Transportation. He is also a guest editor for the Journal of Computational Science, Neurocomputing, Swarm, and Evolutionary Computation and IEEE ITS Magazine.",institutionString:"TECNALIA Research & Innovation",institution:{name:"Tecnalia",country:{name:"Spain"}}},{id:"275829",title:"Dr.",name:"Esther",middleName:null,surname:"Villar-Rodriguez",slug:"esther-villar-rodriguez",fullName:"Esther Villar-Rodriguez",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/275829/images/system/275829.jpg",biography:"Dr. Esther Villar obtained a Ph.D. in Information and Communication Technologies from the University of Alcalá, Spain, in 2015. She obtained a degree in Computer Science from the University of Deusto, Spain, in 2010, and an MSc in Computer Languages and Systems from the National University of Distance Education, Spain, in 2012. Her areas of interest and knowledge include natural language processing (NLP), detection of impersonation in social networks, semantic web, and machine learning. Dr. Esther Villar made several contributions at conferences and publishing in various journals in those fields. Currently, she is working within the OPTIMA (Optimization Modeling & Analytics) business of TECNALIA’s ICT Division as a data scientist in projects related to the prediction and optimization of management and industrial processes (resource planning, energy efficiency, etc).",institutionString:"TECNALIA Research & Innovation",institution:{name:"Tecnalia",country:{name:"Spain"}}},{id:"49813",title:"Dr.",name:"Javier",middleName:null,surname:"Del Ser",slug:"javier-del-ser",fullName:"Javier Del Ser",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/49813/images/system/49813.png",biography:"Prof. Dr. Javier Del Ser received his first PhD in Telecommunication Engineering (Cum Laude) from the University of Navarra, Spain, in 2006, and a second PhD in Computational Intelligence (Summa Cum Laude) from the University of Alcala, Spain, in 2013. He is currently a principal researcher in data analytics and optimisation at TECNALIA (Spain), a visiting fellow at the Basque Center for Applied Mathematics (BCAM) and a part-time lecturer at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU). His research interests gravitate on the use of descriptive, prescriptive and predictive algorithms for data mining and optimization in a diverse range of application fields such as Energy, Transport, Telecommunications, Health and Industry, among others. In these fields he has published more than 240 articles, co-supervised 8 Ph.D. theses, edited 6 books, coauthored 7 patents and participated/led more than 40 research projects. He is a Senior Member of the IEEE, and a recipient of the Biscay Talent prize for his academic career.",institutionString:"Tecnalia Research & Innovation",institution:{name:"Tecnalia",country:{name:"Spain"}}},{id:"278948",title:"Dr.",name:"Carlos Pedro",middleName:null,surname:"Gonçalves",slug:"carlos-pedro-goncalves",fullName:"Carlos Pedro Gonçalves",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRcmyQAC/Profile_Picture_1564224512145",biography:'Carlos Pedro Gonçalves (PhD) is an Associate Professor at Lusophone University of Humanities and Technologies and a researcher on Complexity Sciences, Quantum Technologies, Artificial Intelligence, Strategic Studies, Studies in Intelligence and Security, FinTech and Financial Risk Modeling. He is also a progammer with programming experience in:\n\nA) Quantum Computing using Qiskit Python module and IBM Quantum Experience Platform, with software developed on the simulation of Quantum Artificial Neural Networks and Quantum Cybersecurity;\n\nB) Artificial Intelligence and Machine learning programming in Python;\n\nC) Artificial Intelligence, Multiagent Systems Modeling and System Dynamics Modeling in Netlogo, with models developed in the areas of Chaos Theory, Econophysics, Artificial Intelligence, Classical and Quantum Complex Systems Science, with the Econophysics models having been cited worldwide and incorporated in PhD programs by different Universities.\n\nReceived an Arctic Code Vault Contributor status by GitHub, due to having developed open source software preserved in the \\"Arctic Code Vault\\" for future generations (https://archiveprogram.github.com/arctic-vault/), with the Strategy Analyzer A.I. module for decision making support (based on his PhD thesis, used in his Classes on Decision Making and in Strategic Intelligence Consulting Activities) and QNeural Python Quantum Neural Network simulator also preserved in the \\"Arctic Code Vault\\", for access to these software modules see: https://github.com/cpgoncalves. He is also a peer reviewer with outsanding review status from Elsevier journals, including Physica A, Neurocomputing and Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence. Science CV available at: https://www.cienciavitae.pt//pt/8E1C-A8B3-78C5 and ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0298-3974',institutionString:"University of Lisbon",institution:{name:"Universidade Lusófona",country:{name:"Portugal"}}},{id:"241400",title:"Prof.",name:"Mohammed",middleName:null,surname:"Bsiss",slug:"mohammed-bsiss",fullName:"Mohammed Bsiss",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/241400/images/8062_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"276128",title:"Dr.",name:"Hira",middleName:null,surname:"Fatima",slug:"hira-fatima",fullName:"Hira Fatima",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/276128/images/14420_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Hira Fatima\nAssistant Professor\nDepartment of Mathematics\nInstitute of Applied Science\nMangalayatan University, Aligarh\nMobile: no : 8532041179\nhirafatima2014@gmal.com\n\nDr. Hira Fatima has received his Ph.D. degree in pure Mathematics from Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh India. Currently working as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mathematics, Institute of Applied Science, Mangalayatan University, Aligarh. She taught so many courses of Mathematics of UG and PG level. Her research Area of Expertise is Functional Analysis & Sequence Spaces. She has been working on Ideal Convergence of double sequence. She has published 17 research papers in National and International Journals including Cogent Mathematics, Filomat, Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems, Advances in Difference Equations, Journal of Mathematical Analysis, Journal of Mathematical & Computer Science etc. She has also reviewed few research papers for the and international journals. She is a member of Indian Mathematical Society.",institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"414880",title:"Dr.",name:"Maryam",middleName:null,surname:"Vatankhah",slug:"maryam-vatankhah",fullName:"Maryam Vatankhah",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Borough of Manhattan Community College",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"414879",title:"Prof.",name:"Mohammad-Reza",middleName:null,surname:"Akbarzadeh-Totonchi",slug:"mohammad-reza-akbarzadeh-totonchi",fullName:"Mohammad-Reza Akbarzadeh-Totonchi",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Ferdowsi University of Mashhad",country:{name:"Iran"}}},{id:"414878",title:"Prof.",name:"Reza",middleName:null,surname:"Fazel-Rezai",slug:"reza-fazel-rezai",fullName:"Reza Fazel-Rezai",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"American Public University System",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"426586",title:"Dr.",name:"Oladunni A.",middleName:null,surname:"Daramola",slug:"oladunni-a.-daramola",fullName:"Oladunni A. Daramola",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Federal University of Technology",country:{name:"Nigeria"}}},{id:"357014",title:"Prof.",name:"Leon",middleName:null,surname:"Bobrowski",slug:"leon-bobrowski",fullName:"Leon Bobrowski",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Bialystok University of Technology",country:{name:"Poland"}}},{id:"302698",title:"Dr.",name:"Yao",middleName:null,surname:"Shan",slug:"yao-shan",fullName:"Yao Shan",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Dalian University of Technology",country:{name:"China"}}},{id:"354126",title:"Dr.",name:"Setiawan",middleName:null,surname:"Hadi",slug:"setiawan-hadi",fullName:"Setiawan Hadi",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Padjadjaran University",country:{name:"Indonesia"}}},{id:"125911",title:"Prof.",name:"Jia-Ching",middleName:null,surname:"Wang",slug:"jia-ching-wang",fullName:"Jia-Ching Wang",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"National Central University",country:{name:"Taiwan"}}},{id:"332603",title:"Prof.",name:"Kumar S.",middleName:null,surname:"Ray",slug:"kumar-s.-ray",fullName:"Kumar S. Ray",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Indian Statistical Institute",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"415409",title:"Prof.",name:"Maghsoud",middleName:null,surname:"Amiri",slug:"maghsoud-amiri",fullName:"Maghsoud Amiri",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Allameh Tabataba'i University",country:{name:"Iran"}}},{id:"357085",title:"Mr.",name:"P. Mohan",middleName:null,surname:"Anand",slug:"p.-mohan-anand",fullName:"P. Mohan Anand",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"356696",title:"Ph.D. Student",name:"P.V.",middleName:null,surname:"Sai Charan",slug:"p.v.-sai-charan",fullName:"P.V. Sai Charan",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"357086",title:"Prof.",name:"Sandeep K.",middleName:null,surname:"Shukla",slug:"sandeep-k.-shukla",fullName:"Sandeep K. Shukla",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur",country:{name:"India"}}}]}},subseries:{item:{id:"17",type:"subseries",title:"Metabolism",keywords:"Biomolecules Metabolism, Energy Metabolism, Metabolic Pathways, Key Metabolic Enzymes, Metabolic Adaptation",scope:"Metabolism is frequently defined in biochemistry textbooks as the overall process that allows living systems to acquire and use the free energy they need for their vital functions or the chemical processes that occur within a living organism to maintain life. Behind these definitions are hidden all the aspects of normal and pathological functioning of all processes that the topic ‘Metabolism’ will cover within the Biochemistry Series. 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