Wednesday, 2 November 201607:30 | Breakfast & Registration | | Day 1: Session Chair | | Session Chair: Aaron Beeler, Assistant Professor, Boston University, United States of America |
| | 09:00 | Welcome Address from the Flow Chemistry Society Ferenc Darvas, Chairman, Flow Chemistry Society, Switzerland
| 09:15 | | Conference Chair Macrocyclization in Continuous Flow Shawn Collins, Full Professor, Université de Montréal, Canada
The development of various strategies to enable macrocyclization of natural products and pharmaceuticals in continuous flow will be described. |
| 10:00 | The Application of Flow Chemistry to the Manufacturing Route for MK8931 John Naber, Director, Flow Chemistry and Lab Automation, Process Research & Development, Merck & Co, United States of America
The development of a key step in the synthesis of Merck’s Phase III compound for Alzheimer’s disease from an initial lab scale hit through to a pilot plant campaign on hundreds of kilograms is presented. | 10:30 | Coffee & Networking in the Exhibition Hall | 11:00 | Accelerated C–H Activation Chemistry in Flow Microreactors Timothy Noël, Professor, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Our group has focused on the development of more efficient C–H activation to establish carbon-carbon bonds, including the alkenylation and arylation of indoles and cross-dehydrogenative coupling reactions. | 11:30 | Shading Synthesis Green Using Enabling Technologies Duncan Browne, Lecturer in Organic Chemistry, Cardiff University, United Kingdom
In this presentation I will discuss the development of continuous multistep process for the safe generation of diazonium salts followed by a green reduction by vitamin C to the corresponding hydrazines and subsequent cyclocondensation to afford a range of pyrazole products. | 12:00 | Advancing Continuous Processing Through Innovative External Collaborations Scott May, Senior Research Advisor, Eli Lilly & Co, United States of America
This talk will highlight the results and benefits from several different LIFA and LRAP projects including continuous Asymmetric Hydroformylation, Aerobic Oxidation and Asymmetric Aza-Henry Reactions. | 12:30 | Lunch & Networking in the Exhibition Hall | 13:30 | Poster Viewing Session
Award Sponsored by | 14:00 | | 14:45 | Diazomethane without Tears. Or Explosions C. Oliver Kappe, Professor and Scientific Director, Center for Continuous Flow Synthesis and Processing, University of Graz, Austria
A simple and robust semi-batch apparatus for the generation of anhydrous solutions of diazomethane on laboratory scale is presented. Diazomethane is produced by base-mediated decomposition of Diazald within a semi-permeable Teflon AF-2400 tubing and subsequently selectively separated from the tubing into a flask. | 15:15 | Coffee & Networking in the Exhibition Hall | 15:45 | Preparative Fluoroalkylation via Visible Light Induced Electron Transfer Corey Stephenson, Professor of Chemistry, Willard Henry Dow Laboratory, University of Michigan, United States of America
The development of visible light photocatalysis in flow will be presented focusing on radical fluoroalkylation reactions. | 16:15 | Automated Flow Peptide Synthesis: Toward Amide Bonds at Nature’s Pace Brad Pentelute, Assistant Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States of America
Here we describe a rapid flow solid phase peptide synthesis methodology that enables incorporation of an amino acid residue in forty seconds with amide-bond formation taking only five seconds. To demonstrate the broad applicability of this method, it was employed to synthesize hundreds of peptides and proteins. | 16:45 | Enz-Flow – The Union of Continuous Processing and Bioprocessing for Chemical Synthesis Amanda Evans, Assistant Professor, California State University Fullerton, United States of America
In order to establish new, greener, precedents for generating active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), the Evans group is focused on advancing the fusion of continuous processing and bioprocessing technologies, or "Enz-Flow”. | 17:15 | Drinks Reception in the Exhibition Hall | 18:15 | Close of Day 1 |
Thursday, 3 November 201607:30 | Breakfast & Registration | | Day 2: Session Chair | | Session Chair: Shawn Collins, Full Professor, Université de Montréal, Canada |
| | 08:30 | Carbon Nanohoops in Continuous Flow Ramesh Jasti, Associate Professor, Organic, Inorganic, Materials, and Supramolecular Chemistry, University of Oregon, United States of America
The cycloparaphenylenes, or carbon nanohoops, are the smallest possible slices of carbon nanotubes. In this presentation, I will describe my group's development of the key macrocyclization reaction in flow to prepare these materials. | 09:00 | | 09:45 | Analyzing in Flow Michael Organ, Professor, York University, Canada
Discussion will focus around the development of in-line sampling and analysis for reaction process optimization and production run monitoring. | 10:15 | Coffee & Networking in the Exhibition Hall | 10:45 | Towards Development of Chemo-Enzymatic Continuous-Flow Strategies for API’s Synthesis Rodrigo de Souza, Associate Professor, Federal University of Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Development of Chemo-enzymatic continuous-flow cascade reaction will be presented | 11:15 | Development of Continuous Flow Chemistry Using Online PAT Matt Bio, President/CEO , Snapdragon Chemistry, United States of America
The integration and use of in-line process monitoring tools to facilitate the discovery and rapid optimization of flow chemistry processes will be discussed through case studies. | 11:45 | Novel Conditions for the Preparation of Diazo Reagents in Flow and their Applications Andre Charette, Professor, Universite De Montreal, Canada
Diazo compounds are versatile reagents in organic synthesis. A new set of conditions has been developed for their preparation in continuous flow. The diazo reagents are produced in solution free of contaminants that may interfere with the subsequent reactions. | 12:30 | Lunch & Networking in the Exhibition Hall | 13:30 | Poster Viewing Session
Award Sponsored by | 14:00 | | Conference Chair Enabling Synthesis and Medicinal Chemistry with Continuous Flow Reactions Aaron Beeler, Assistant Professor, Boston University, United States of America
Development of reactions in flow has many advantages, but perhaps the most enabling is the ability to facilitate transformations that are otherwise challenging or impossible. We are working to develop such reactions and apply them to synthesis and medicinal chemistry. This presentation will discuss the optimization and application of photochemical reactions and reactions utilizing highly reactive, short-lived intermediates. |
| 14:45 | Developing A Compact, Portable 4.7 T Driven NMR System for At-Line Reaction Monitoring David Strand, President & CEO, Protasis Corporation, United States of America
Historically, chemical reactor control has been challenging because composition measurements are often slow and non-specific. Compact, portable mid-field (200 – 400 MHz) NMR analyzers are now possible and will begin to provide practical composition measurements for research, pilot and production reactors in near-real-time. A first-of-kind, cryogen-free 200 MHz process NMR analyzer is described and initial reactor monitoring results are presented. | 15:15 | Development of Continuous Flow Micro-reactors for Fast Liquid and Liquid-liquid Reactions Arturo Macchi, Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Ottawa, Canada
The reactor design for fast liquid and liquid-liquid reactions was optimized based on the impact of phase physical properties, mixer geometry, method of energy input and scale. | 15:45 | Close of Conference, Coffee & Networking in the Exhibition Hall |
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