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Paul F. Greenfield

Researcher at University of Queensland

Publications -  156
Citations -  9086

Paul F. Greenfield is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fermentation & Oil shale. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 156 publications receiving 8559 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul F. Greenfield include Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

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The indirect effects of multiplicity of infection on baculovirus expressed proteins in insect cells: secreted and non-secreted products.

TL;DR: Evidence is presented in this study that indicates the extremely limited predictability of post-infection cell growth at very low multiplicities of infection of less than 0.1 pfu/cell, and due to the inaccuracy of the current virus quantification techniques, the possibility of excessive post- infection cell growth and subsequent nutrient limitation was found to be significantly increased.
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Optimising fed-batch production of recombinant proteins using the baculovirus expression vector system.

TL;DR: The response surface model generated can be used to design a more economical fed-batch operation, in which nutrient feed volumes are minimised while maintaining acceptable improvements in beta-Gal yield.
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Anaerobic digestion: impact of future greenhouse gases mitigation policies on methane generation and usage

TL;DR: The paper outlines the increasing need for wastewater treatment plants to factor greenhouse gas mitigation issues into their medium- as and long-term strategies, and identifies anaerobic enhouse as processes as being at the core of such strategies.
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Substrate limitation in the baculovirus expression vector system.

TL;DR: The inability to infect insect cell cultures at the highest achievable cell densities has imposed major limitations to both the fundamental understanding of the Baculovirus Expression Vector System (BEVS) and full exploitation of its potential productive capacity for recombinant (beta-galAcNPV) products.
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A Kinetic Study on Photocatalytic Oxidation of Phenol in water by silica-dispersed titania nanoparticles

TL;DR: A kinetic model was developed to describe the effect of the crystal size and titania concentration on the reactivity of the SiO (2)-TiO(2) samples and it was found that k(s) decreases with increasing anatase size and TiO( 2) concentration.