BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//jEvents 2.0 for Joomla//EN CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH BEGIN:VEVENT UID:924c7ea0cf03dfd135ee000a39e0bc2d CATEGORIES:Colloquium CREATED:20211020T184322 SUMMARY:Professor Jie Wu, National University of Singapore DESCRIPTION:Flow Technology: Towards Automated and On-Demand Synthesis\n A survey condu cted at Lonza indicated that 50% of the organic reactions would benefit fro m transferring from conventional batch synthesis to continuous production. Compared to batch or semibatch production, continuous production has the ad vantages of steady state operation, high heat and mass transfer rates, enha nced photon flux, reproducibility, and improved safety and process reliabil ity. However, there are a lot of problems associated with continuous flow s ynthesis, such as difficult for parallel screening, handling of solid compo unds, as well as incompatibility of reagents and solvents in streamlined mu ltistep continuous-flow synthesis.\nThe research in Wu’s group focus on tac king those problems by designing novel advanced flow reactors, and utilizin g them in synthesis of fine chemicals using inexpensive natural gases and h ydrocarbons as feedstocks under visible-light irradiation. Compared to step wise batch synthesis, multistep continuous flow synthesis enables the combi nation of multiple synthetic steps into a single and uninterrupted reactor network, thereby circumventing the need to isolate intermediates, and enabl ing automated synthesis. This talk will include the description of design o f the “stop-flow micro-tubing” reactor and merging solid-phase synthesis an d flow synthesis towards automated and on-demand synthesis of value-added f unctionalized organic molecules.\n \nHosted by Professor Jason Zhang\nFor Z oom meeting information, please contact Loretta Lupo @ This email address i s being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.\n X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Flow Technology: Towards Automated and On-Demand Synthesis strong>
A survey conducted at Lonza indicated that 50% of the o rganic reactions would benefit from transferring from conventional batch sy nthesis to continuous production. Compared to batch or semibatch production , continuous production has the advantages of steady state operation, high heat and mass transfer rates, enhanced photon flux, reproducibility, and im proved safety and process reliability. However, there are a lot of problems associated with continuous flow synthesis, such as difficult for parallel screening, handling of solid compounds, as well as incompatibility of reage nts and solvents in streamlined multistep continuous-flow synthesis.
The research in Wu’s group focus on tacking those problems by designing nov el advanced flow reactors, and utilizing them in synthesis of fine chemical s using inexpensive natural gases and hydrocarbons as feedstocks under visi ble-light irradiation. Compared to stepwise batch synthesis, multistep cont inuous flow synthesis enables the combination of multiple synthetic steps i nto a single and uninterrupted reactor network, thereby circumventing the n eed to isolate intermediates, and enabling automated synthesis. This talk w ill include the description of design of the “stop-flow micro-tubing” react or and merging solid-phase synthesis and flow synthesis towards automated a nd on-demand synthesis of value-added functionalized organic molecules.
Hosted by Professor Jason Zhang
For Zoom meeting info
rmation, please contact Loretta Lupo @