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 : Eliminating implant failure in humans with nano chemistry: 30,000 cases and counting
Thomas J Webster, Brown University, United States
Title : Absorption and emission in organic nanostructures: Theoretical modeling
Alexander Bagaturyants, National Research Nuclear University MEPhI, Russian Federation
Title : Distal functionalization via transition metal catalysis
Haibo Ge, Texas Tech University, United States
Title : Personalized and Precision Medicine (PPM) as a unique healthcare model through biodesign-inspired and upgraded business marketing to secure the human healthcare and biosafety
Sergey Suchkov, N.D. Zelinskii Institute for Organic Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russian Federation
Title : Solar box cooker dehydration, and relative humidity endpoint detection, of lamiaceae culinary leaves on the island of Crete
Victor John Law, Technical University Dublin, Ireland
Title : Unraveling the ultrastructure and functions of the neuronal membrane skeleton using super-resolution fluorescence microscopy
Ruobo Zhou, Pennsylvania State University, United States