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SELECTBIO Conferences Flow Chemistry Europe 2017

Flow Chemistry Europe 2017 Agenda


Print Agenda

Tuesday, 7 February 2017

08:45

Welcome Address from the Flow Chemistry Society
Ferenc Darvas, Chairman, Flow Chemistry Society, Switzerland


Session 1: Back to Einstein - Electrification of Chemistry - Making use of the Smallest Units, Photons and Electrons
Session Chair: Mimi Hii, Professor, Imperial College London, United Kingdom

09:00

Volker HesselConference Chair

Electrification of Chemistry
Volker Hessel, Professor, Eindhoven University of Technology, Australia

New smart electromagnetic activation modes (photo, ultrasound, plasma, microwave, etc. with their discrete rotational, vibrational, electron levels) provide a powerful alternative to temperature activation (Maxwell-Boltzmann theory: collision, momentum, probability). This process innovation needs a window of opportunity such as the ‘Plasma Agriculture’ which opens the door to ‘Fertilizing with the Wind’ in ‘Plants on Wheels’.

09:45

Bringing Diazomethane to the Bench: A Lab-Scale Reactor for the Continuous Generation of Anhydrous Diazomethane
Doris Dallinger, Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Graz, Austria

In this presentation the in-situ on-demand generation of anhydrous diazomethane using membrane technology in a tube-in-tube or tube-in-flask reactor will be covered. These concepts allow safe and convenient preparation and handling of diazomethane.

10:15

Extended Path Flow Electrosynthesis Reactors as a Simple and Scalable Tool for Organic Synthesis
Richard Brown, Professor, University of Southampton, United Kingdom

Extended path length microfluidic electrochemical reactors and how they facilitate the synthesis of multiple grams per hour of interesting products will be discussed and exemplified with a variety of stimulating synthetic examples.

10:45

Coffee & Networking in Exhibition Hall


Session 2
Session Chair: Thomas Wirth, Professor, Cardiff University, United Kingdom

11:15

Photopolymerizations in Continuous Flow: From Highly Efficient to Overefficient Reactions
Thomas Junkers, Professor, Hasselt University, Belgium

Photoflow reactions for the development of prescision macromolecular materials are discussed. The high efficiency of photocontrolled polymerizations is highlighted, but also over-efficiencies with respect of the use of conventional photoinitiators in flow reactions are demonstrated.

11:45

Timothy NoëlKeynote Presentation

A Conceptually New Photomicroreactor Design for Energy-efficient Solar Photochemistry
Timothy Noël, Professor, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

We will present our results concerning a novel device integrating the luminescent solar concentrator (LSC) concept with photomicroreactors, allowing the direct use of solar light in photochemistry without the need for any intermediate energy conversion. This leaf-inspired photomicroreactor based on fluorescent dye-embedded polydimethylsiloxane collects sunlight, focuses the energy to a narrow wavelength region, and then transports that energy to embedded microchannels where the flowing reactants are converted.

12:30

Little Things Factory Technology Spotlight:
Autonomous Phase Separator - An Integrated Part of Internet of Lab (IoL) Application
Julian Heinrich , Chemist , Little Things Factory

Separating two phases with dynamic respective flowrates can not be done with static separators. Actively controlled phase separators use the power and flexibility of modern microcontrollers in embedded systems. A smart microcontroller software allows a self-regulating phase separator, which even handles the absence of one phase without tangling.

12:45

Lunch & Networking in the Exhibition Hall

13:15

Award LogoPoster Viewing Session


Afternoon Session Sponsor
Session SponsorsSession Sponsor


Session 3
Session Chair: Dominique Roberge, Group Leader, Lonza Group Ltd, Switzerland

13:45

Anelli's (TEMPO) Oxidation of Alcohol by Flow Chemistry, Industrial Scale
Guy Samburski, Senior Director R&D, TEVA , Israel

A batch process for TEMPO oxidation was successfully converted to a flow process in industrial scale, for an Active Pharmaceutical intermediate. Yield was significantly increased and low temperatures could be avoided.

14:15

Aerobic Oxidation of Aldehydes: Lessons Learned and to be Learned using Continuous Flow Microreactor
Alain Favre-Reguillon, Associate Professor, University of Lyon, France

This talk will highlight the advantages of continuous flow gas-liquid processes for aerobic oxidation of aldehydes. The benefits given by continuous flow technology, including safety, renders the procedure synthetically very interesting and results in the development of improved protocols.

14:45

'Complexity Generation by Photochemistry In Flow : From Grams to Kilograms’
Kevin Booker-Milburn, Professor, University of Bristol, United Kingdom

This lecture will describe the development of a number of photochemical reactions for the formation of complex organic molecules with applications in drug discovery and natural product synthesis. In particular the use of novel flow reactors for the photochemical synthesis of multigram quantities will be described. The lecture will also introduce ’The Firefly’ ; a novel, small-footprint reactor that enables the synthesis of multi-kilogram amounts of photoproduct per-day within a standard 1.5 meter fumehood.

15:15

Electro-organic Synthesis: Metal- and Reagent-free
Siegfried Waldvogel, Professor, Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany

Within this presentation the potential of electroorganic synthesis for value-added products – precursors for ligands or pharmaceutically intermediates - will be outlined. The examples cover the whole ranging from efficient screening to scale-up of the electrosynthetic process.

15:45

Coffee & Networking in Exhibition Hall


Session 4: Back to Health – Medicinal Flow Chemistry in the Era of FDA’s Door Opening Towards Emerging Technologies
Session Chair: Claudio Battilocchio , Dr , University of Cambridge , United Kingdom

16:15

Taming Diazo Transfer Chemistry in Flow
Anita Maguire, Professor of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University College Cork, Ireland

Enabling the safe application of diazo chemistry in process chemistry through use in flow ; enhanced control of the synthesis leading to enhanced yields, purity and ease of scale-up

16:45

Application of Flow Chemistry Techniques to the Drug Discovery Process
Stevan Djuric, Senior Director, Discovery Chemistry and Technology, AbbVie, United States of America

The talk will focus on application of several flow chemical techniques including photochemistry, electrochemistry and high temperature chemistry to provide additional opportunities to the medicinal chemistry engaged in drug discovery activities.

17:15

Fast Mixing, Ketimine Additions, and the Application of Flow Chemistry to Verubecestat
John Naber, Director, Flow Chemistry and Lab Automation, Process Research & Development, Merck & Co, United States of America

The development of a novel method for ketimine additions enabled a key step in the synthesis of Merck Sharpe and Dohme’s (MSD) Phase III compound for Alzheimer’s disease. The production of hundreds of kilograms of material in a pilot plant campaign and the associated mixing studies at lab and plant scale are presented.

17:45

Flow Chemistry from Industrial R&D to Industrial Applications
Stéphane Laurent , Head of Department, Innovative Technologies, Servier, France

Two industrial applications will be presented, one with several unit operations (several tons/year) and a second in the environmental field.

18:15

Flow Reactor Technologies and Scale-up Methodology
Dominique Roberge, Group Leader, Lonza Group Ltd, Switzerland

This work is focused on characterizing and developing models for the overall mass transfer performance of micro/milli reactors.  It will be shown that the hydraulic diameter of different mixers can be adjusted for flow rates via the 3/7 power rule.

18:45

End of Day 1

20:00

Conference Gala Dinner

Wednesday, 8 February 2017


Session 5
Session Chair: Volker Hessel, Professor, Eindhoven University of Technology, Australia

08:30

Whole-cell Biotransformations within the Microflow Systems
Polona Žnidaršic Plazl, Professor, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

Whole-cell biocatalysis and microreactor technology are gaining importance in modern biotechnology. This lecture will highlight a few examples using yeast and bacterial cells for establishing continuous biocatalytic processes in a microflow systems.

09:00

Microscale Technology and Biocatalytic Processes: How to Minimize the Gap Between Research and Industry
Igor Plazl, Professor, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

This lecture will discuss the microscale bioprocess development based on scale-up/ numbering-up concept. The design of packed bed microreactor “between two-plates“ will be presented together with innovative approaches, protocols, and tools to minimize the gap between research and industry.

09:30

Mimi HiiConference Chair

Interrogating Catalyst Deactivation and Leaching in Continuous Flow
Mimi Hii, Professor, Imperial College London, United Kingdom


Back to Nature - End-to-end Continuous-flow Production
Session Chair: Mimi Hii, Professor, Imperial College London, United Kingdom

10:00

Around the World Synthesis: Harnessing the Cloud for Organic Chemistry
Daniel Fitzpatrick , Researcher, Ley Group, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom

During this talk, the use of cloud-computing will be explored in the context of practical organic synthesis. Showcase examples will be discussed and the problem-solving approach used for flow API synthesis will be highlighted.

10:30

Coffee & Networking in Exhibition Hall


Session 6
Session Chair: Richard Brown, Professor, University of Southampton, United Kingdom

11:00

Self-optimising Flow Reactors
Richard Bourne, Lecturer in Reaction Engineering, University of Leeds, United Kingdom

This talk will discuss the development of automated reactor platforms for the rapid optimisation of complex reaction systems and give industrially relevant case studies and integration of advanced analytical techniques.

11:30

Continuous Efficient Multistage Extraction
Andrea Adamo, Chief Executive Officer, Zaiput Flow Technologies, United States of America

We present an approach to flexible and scalable flow based multistage liquid-liquid extraction. We provide background, discuss system design and implementation, show benchmarking of our set up with respect to literature test systems, show a complex multicomponent example and discuss scalability.

12:00

Flowid Products BVTechnology Spotlight:
SpinPro Reactor Technology for Flow Chemistry
Wouter Stam, Managing Director, Flowid Products BV

This talk will be about the use of SpinPro reactors and their applications, especially multiphase and precipitation reactions.

12:15

Lunch & Networking in the Exhibition Hall

13:00

Award LogoPoster Viewing Session


Session 7
Session Chair: Kevin Booker-Milburn, Professor, University of Bristol, United Kingdom

13:30

Integrated Synthetic Platforms for Chemical Probes: A Journey through the Routes of Flow Processing
Antimo Gioiello, Associate Professor, University of Perugia , Italy

The talk will focus on our recent efforts directed towards the design and implementation of integrated flow platforms for the production of chemical probes and compound library in drug discovery programmes.

14:00

Enz-Flow: Continuous Bioprocessing for Greener API Synthesis
Amanda Evans, Assistant Professor, California State University Fullerton, United States of America

“The Evans group is applying the unified use of continuous processing and continuous bioprocessing/engineered enzyme catalysis (“Enz-Flow”) towards novel syntheses of three key active pharmaceutical ingredients.”

14:30

Coffee & Networking in Exhibition Hall


Session 8
Session Chair: Stevan Djuric, Senior Director, Discovery Chemistry and Technology, AbbVie, United States of America

14:45

Step-by-step Towards End-to-end: Examples of Integrated Processes for the Continuous Production of Pharmaceuticals
Heidrun Gruber-Wölfler, Associate Professor, Graz University of Technology, Austria

Different examples of continuous pharmaceutical manufacturing will be presented. The focus of this presentation will be on the coupling of synthesis and crystallization in flow with a follow-up in continuous secondary manufacturing.

15:15

Flow Electrochemistry
Thomas Wirth, Professor, Cardiff University, United Kingdom

The development of a flow microreactor for electrochemistry will be discussed alongside first applications in synthesis.

15:45

Bridging Industry and Academia with Enabling Technologies
Claudio Battilocchio , Dr , University of Cambridge , United Kingdom

This talk will show specific examples of industrial challenges that were solved using specific enabling solutions.

16:15

Award LogoBest Poster Award Announcement

16:20

Cose of Conference Address
Ferenc Darvas, Chairman, Flow Chemistry Society, Switzerland


Add to Calendar ▼2017-02-07 00:00:002017-02-08 00:00:00Europe/LondonFlow Chemistry Europe 2017Flow Chemistry Europe 2017 in Cripps Court, Magdalene College, Cambridge, UK Cripps Court, Magdalene College, Cambridge, UK SELECTBIOenquiries@selectbiosciences.com