A natural product, in the broadest sense, is anything that is produced by life, including biotic materials (such as wood and silk), bio-based materials (such as bioplastics and corn starch), bodily fluids (such as milk and plant exudates), and other natural materials that were once found in living organisms (e.g., soil, coal). Any organic substance generated by a living organism is a more stringent definition of a natural product. Natural goods have a high structural diversity and distinctive pharmacological or biological actions as a result of hundreds of thousands of years of natural selection and evolutionary processes that have influenced their utility. Natural products chemistry function and contributions in advancing physical and biological sciences, their transdisciplinary domains, and the emergence of new paths by providing fresh applications, constructive inputs, drive, complete understanding, and a broad perspective
Title : Rational design of battery cathode materials
Kyeongjae Cho, University of Texas at Dallas, United States
Title : Pharmaceutical chemistry studies of novel biologics and drugs for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Yong Xiao Wang, Albany Medical College, United States
Title : Theoretical modeling in organic nanophotonics: Processes and devices
Alexander Bagaturyants, Retired, Israel
Title : Hot atom chemistry - Past, present and future
Shree Niwas Chaturvedi, Centre for Aptitude Analysis and Talent Search, India
Title : Chemical engineering of vanadium, titanium or chromium zeolites for application in environmental catalysis
Stanislaw Dzwigaj, Sorbonne Université, France
Title : Distal functionalization via transition metal catalysis
Haibo Ge, Texas Tech University, United States