National Repository of Grey Literature 4 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Comparison of Cryptographic Libraries in Linux Environment
Bartoš, Milan ; Malinka, Kamil (referee) ; Barabas, Maroš (advisor)
Bachelor's thesis deals with the comparison of the three cryptographic libraries used in the Linux environment. These are GnuTLS/nettle, NSS and OpenSSL. These are compared in terms of support for basic cryptographic functionality (symmetric and asymmetric ciphers, hash algorithms, SSL/TLS), working with hardware tokens and SSL/TLS. Libraries are also compared in terms of API design with a focus on stability and work with certificates and the possibility of more independent use of the library in a single process.
Preparation of edible antimicrobial packaging
Kozubová, Petra ; Dzurická, Lucia (referee) ; Skoumalová, Petra (advisor)
This bachelor’s thesis is focused on preparation and characterization of eatable packaging. Eatable packaging consists of two components, antimicrobial component and base of packaging. The task of eatable packaging is to protect product against antimicrobial attack and to extend durability of the product. As antimicrobial components were used water and oil extracts of several herbs (mint, nettle, lavender, cinnamon, cloves, vanilla, ginger and rhinoceros). Oil extracts were also encapsulated into liposomes for better application. Firstly, concentrations of polyphenoles and antioxidants of extracts were determined. Oil extract of clove contained the highest concentration of both determined substances. Encapsulation efficiency, stability and size of liposomes were tested too. All prepared liposomes were stable and relatively of the same size. Also high encapsulation efficiency was observed. Next, antimicrobial activity of prepared extracts and liposome particles against yeast Candida glabrata and two bacteria strains Escherichia coli and Staphycococcus epidermidis was tested and the high antimicrobial activity reported mainly all tested liposomes. Then alginate, chitosan and carboxymethylcellulose and their combinations respectively were used as bases of packaging. Created film had to meet several parameters, especially suitable sensory properties such as pleasant taste and smell, as well as invisibility, gloss, affordability and suitable manipulability. Combination of 2% carboxymethylcellulose and 1% alginate in a ration of 2:1 with liposomes of mint as antimicrobial component achieved the best results.
Preparation of edible antimicrobial packaging
Kozubová, Petra ; Dzurická, Lucia (referee) ; Skoumalová, Petra (advisor)
This bachelor’s thesis is focused on preparation and characterization of eatable packaging. Eatable packaging consists of two components, antimicrobial component and base of packaging. The task of eatable packaging is to protect product against antimicrobial attack and to extend durability of the product. As antimicrobial components were used water and oil extracts of several herbs (mint, nettle, lavender, cinnamon, cloves, vanilla, ginger and rhinoceros). Oil extracts were also encapsulated into liposomes for better application. Firstly, concentrations of polyphenoles and antioxidants of extracts were determined. Oil extract of clove contained the highest concentration of both determined substances. Encapsulation efficiency, stability and size of liposomes were tested too. All prepared liposomes were stable and relatively of the same size. Also high encapsulation efficiency was observed. Next, antimicrobial activity of prepared extracts and liposome particles against yeast Candida glabrata and two bacteria strains Escherichia coli and Staphycococcus epidermidis was tested and the high antimicrobial activity reported mainly all tested liposomes. Then alginate, chitosan and carboxymethylcellulose and their combinations respectively were used as bases of packaging. Created film had to meet several parameters, especially suitable sensory properties such as pleasant taste and smell, as well as invisibility, gloss, affordability and suitable manipulability. Combination of 2% carboxymethylcellulose and 1% alginate in a ration of 2:1 with liposomes of mint as antimicrobial component achieved the best results.
Comparison of Cryptographic Libraries in Linux Environment
Bartoš, Milan ; Malinka, Kamil (referee) ; Barabas, Maroš (advisor)
Bachelor's thesis deals with the comparison of the three cryptographic libraries used in the Linux environment. These are GnuTLS/nettle, NSS and OpenSSL. These are compared in terms of support for basic cryptographic functionality (symmetric and asymmetric ciphers, hash algorithms, SSL/TLS), working with hardware tokens and SSL/TLS. Libraries are also compared in terms of API design with a focus on stability and work with certificates and the possibility of more independent use of the library in a single process.

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