08:00 | Registration |
09:00 |  | Keynote Presentation Synthesis and Scale-Up in Continuous Flow Reactors Paul Watts, Distinguished Professor and Research Chair, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa
The application of micro reactors to efficiently optimise reactions will be described. The talk will be extended to address how the data can be used to scale a chemical process. |
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| Session: Meso Flow Chemistry |
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09:30 | Running Hazardous Chemistry in a Flow Environment C. Oliver Kappe, Professor and Scientific Director, Center for Continuous Flow Synthesis and Processing, University of Graz, Austria
In this presentation, the safe use of hydrazoic acid, a highly toxic and explosive reagent, in scalable flow chemistry applications is described. In addition, examples of flow ozonolysis are also presented. |
10:00 | Continuous Flow Reactors for Gas/Liquid Chemical Processes Graham Sandford, Professor, Durham University, United Kingdom
The use of single and multichannel continuous flow reactors for gas/liquid fluorination and oxidation reactions will be described. |
10:30 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall |
11:15 | Expanding the Range of Industrial Reactions by Microreactor Technology Christian Stevens, Senior Full Professor, Ghent University, Belgium
The inherent characteristics of microreactor technology expand the possibilities of a range of reactions which could not be safely performed on an industrial scale. The lecture will focus on reactions including dangerous reagents, renewable resources and multi-component reactions. |
11:45 | A Variation on CSTRs that Makes all the Difference Gilda Gasparini, Continuous Reactor Manager, AM Technology, United Kingdom
Coflore ACR is a flexible flow reactor following the principle of multi stage CSTRs. Examples will be given of its ability to handle multiphase systems and long reaction times at the lab and production scale. |
12:15 | Eschweiler Clark Reaction: Optimization and Scale up from Batch to Continuous Luc Moens, Research Fellow, Johnson & Johnson, Belgium
Kinetic modeling is used as a development tool to optimize and scale up a chemical reaction from batch to the most ideal flow conditions. |
12:45 | Lunch and Networking in Exhibition Hall |
13:30 | Poster Viewing |
14:15 | New Opportunities for Synthesis using Flow Chemistry Thomas Wirth, Professor, Cardiff University, United Kingdom
Biphasic reactions, hazardous reagents and unusual reaction conditions allow novel reactions under flow conditions. |
| Session: New Directions in Flow Chemistry |
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14:45 | A Multi-chip Setup for Analysis of Several Antihistamines in Pharmaceutical Formulations Using Tris (1,10-Phenanthroline) - Ruthenium(II) Peroxydisulphate Chemiluminescence (CL) System Haider Al Lawati, Associate Professor , Sultan Qaboos University, Oman
In this presentation, a multi-chip device consists of micro-reactors and a micro-mixer is described. The use of such devise in analysis of several anti histamines is also presented. |
15:15 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall |
16:00 | Enabling Technologies in Organic Chemistry: From Miniaturized Flowreactors to New Heating Concepts Andreas Kirschning, Group Leader, Leibniz University of Hannover, Germany
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16:30 | Photochemistry and Reactive Intermediates in Flow Alexander Brien, Researcher, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Germany
This presentation describes our recent research into the generation of reactive intermediates via thermal and photochemical techniques in flow reactors. |
17:00 | Accessing New Chemical Space Through Flow-Enabled “Forbidden” Chemistries Neal Sach, Associate Research Fellow, Pfizer, United States of America
A flow technology is presented with the capability to run and analyze 100-300 reactions per day. The application of this technology in accessing new chemical space in drug discovery is presented, with examples of chemistries, traditionally considered ‘forbidden’ in batch, exemplified. |
17:30 | The Utilization of Inline FTIR and Flow Technology for Real Time Reaction Optimization and Monitoring Gabor Szirbik, POC Development Manager, ThalesNano, Hungary
Modern continuous flow technologies offers rapid testing, optimization, and scaling of chemical sequences, often leading to more efficient reactions than under batch conditions. In order to overcome the limitation of off-line analysis ThalesNano flow equipments were combined with ReactIR™ flow cell providing convenient inline analytical tool. |
18:00 | Drinks Reception |