Green Chemistry @ MUN


GreenCentre Canada in-licenses catalyst technology developed at Memorial Green Chemistry and Catalysis Group
April 30, 2013, 6:45 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

GreenCentre has recently in-licensed a catalyst technology from Memorial University and University of Prince Edward Island capable of producing well-defined polymers and fine chemical compounds. Iron-containing catalysts synthesized by the Kozak group at Memorial are being further developed by partners at GreenCentre for use in synthetic chemistry that can potentially be used in pharmaceutical manufacturing. Also, these catalysts have been used by Prof. Mike Shaver and his group, our collaborators at University of Prince Edward Island, to mediate radical-initiated polymerization reactions. Iron, being an inexpensive, abundant and benign metal, is hoped to enhance the sustainability of manufacturing of high-value compounds.



Congratulations to current and former student
April 23, 2013, 11:39 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Time to share some good news 😀

Congratulations to Jennifer Murphy (Dawe-Kerton co-supervision) for completing her B.Sc.(Hons) degree. We wish you every success in the future and we will miss you lots!

Congratulations to Elliott Chard (Kozak group, Honours 2009/10, MSc 2012) on his place at MUN School of Medicine. Chris says “Drop by for a celebratory beer at Bitters some time soon!”



Kozak and Kerton will be at 245th ACS National Meeting in New Orleans next week
April 2, 2013, 5:15 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Drs. Kozak and Kerton will be representing the Green Chemistry and Catalysis Group at the ACS meeting next week. Find out when they are speaking (and when others are speaking) by visiting the program site: http://abstracts.acs.org/chem/245nm/program/divisionindex.php

Dr. Kerton will be participating in a press conference on Tuesday April 9th alongside other speakers from the Green Chemistry Fostered Advances for Chemicals and Fuel Production Symposium.

The press conference will be available online live (Noon, Central time, 2.30 pm in Newfoundland) and also post-event at: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/acslive 



Congratulations to former student
March 28, 2013, 5:25 pm
Filed under: Group News, Science, Students | Tags: , ,

Congratulations to Marcus Drover for being awarded a Vanier CGS award. This means he was ranked as one of the top new doctoral graduate students in any discipline (science, engineering, health/medicine, social sciences and humanities) across Canada! These scholarships are valued at $50,000 per year for three years…..don’t forget to save some of those funds for during a future postdoc, Marcus! 😉 and good luck with your current research.

Marcus is currently pursuing graduate studies in chemistry at UBC under the supervision of Prof. Jen Love and Prof. Laurel Schafer.

He graduated from MUN with a BSc (Hons) degree in 2012. He performed research with several supervisors during his time here. He held SWASP and MUCEP positions in Dr. Kerton‘s group during 2010 (studying Aluminum coordination chemistry). He also worked with Dr. Pansare on organic chemistry in summer 2010 too (Canada Summer Jobs). In summer 2011, after his 3rd year at MUN, he worked in Dr. Kerton‘s group again – this time on biomass conversion – whilst being supported by an NSERC USRA. During the academic year 2011/2012, he worked in Dr. Kerton’s group in collaboration with Dr. Celine Schneider, studying Li and Bi coordination chemistry, and both solution and solid-state multinuclear NMR spectroscopy. An image based on his honours project was selected for inclusion in the student calendar of the Inorganic Division, Chemical Institute of Canada. In summer 2012, he had a second NSERC USRA award and worked with Prof. Laurie Thompson on coordination complexes and supramolecular assembly.

Publications which Marcus co-authored during his time in the Kerton group include:

1. M. W. Drover, K. W. Omari, J. N. Murphy and F. M. Kerton*, “Formation of a renewable amide via direct conversion of N-acetyl-D-glucosamine”, RSC Adv., 2012, 2, 4642-4643,  DOI:10.1039/C2RA20578E

graphicalabstract

Graphical Abstract from RSC Advances paper (2012) – First Author, Marcus Drover

2. N. Ikpo, S. Barbon, M. Drover, L. N. Dawe and F. M. Kerton*, “Aluminum methyl and chloro complexes bearing monoanionic aminephenolate ligands: synthesis, characterization and use in polymerizations”, Organometallics, 2012, 31,  8145-8158, http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/om300757u

3. M. Drover and co-authors, Lithium complexes of amine-phenolate ligands, Manuscript in preparation.

4. M. Drover and co-authors, Bismuth complexes of amine-phenolate ligands, Manuscript in preparation.



Green chemistry and the ocean-based biorefinery – Green Chemistry (RSC Publishing)
March 27, 2013, 10:28 pm
Filed under: Group News, Science, Students

Green chemistry and the ocean-based biorefinery – Green Chemistry (RSC Publishing).

Our perspective is available free for the next 6 weeks! so please read it 🙂

We also have the inside cover page and Anna Simpson (Deputy Editor for Green Chemistry) talks about our paper in the Green Chemistry Blog.

https://i0.wp.com/blogs.rsc.org/gc/files/2013/03/GC015004_ifc_800.jpg



AIDW 2013
March 25, 2013, 12:14 pm
Filed under: Conferences, Group News, Group Photos, Science, Students | Tags: ,

Chris, Fran, Kata, Hua and Jenna attended the Atlantic Inorganic Discussion Weekend in Moncton from March 22-24. We all had a fantastic time and enjoyed 2 or 3 Plenary lectures (some of us missed Prof. Stephan’s talk because we were still en route from Toronto), 3 mixers, several coffee breaks and lots of student/postdoc talks and lectures (about 24 talks and 24 posters were presented). We also got to meet, network and socialize with chemists from Atlantic Canada and further afield. We are already looking forward to the next AIDW, which will probably be held in 2015 somewhere in the region.

poster_photo

photo_meal

Photos (Top: Poster session and Bottom: Thai/Vietnamese meal) from the AIDW conference held in Moncton and organized by Glen Briand and Steve Westcott from Mount Allison University



Biofuels from Waste – Industrial Reality in Canada
March 21, 2013, 5:58 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Interesting article/webpage on making biofuels from municipal waste in Edmonton: http://www.nacleanenergy.com/articles/15734/making-biofuels-from-waste-a-reality



Green chemistry and the ocean-based biorefinery
March 13, 2013, 2:23 pm
Filed under: Group News, Science, Students | Tags: , , ,

Fran, Khaled (PhD 2008-2012), Yi (PhD 2011-2015) and Kelly (Engineering) wrote a perspective (short review) on the possibility of producing chemicals and new materials from ocean-sourced biomass. This has now been accepted for publication in the journal Green Chemistry.

A figure from the paper summarizing some of the potential products/materials available from marine sources

A figure from the paper summarizing some of the potential products/materials available from marine sources

Graphical Abstract for the Perspective

Graphical Abstract for the Perspective

Here is a link to the article: http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2013/GC/C3GC36994C



Congratulations Dr. Ikpo
March 12, 2013, 11:50 am
Filed under: Group News, Students | Tags: , ,

Nduka successfully defended his thesis yesterday afternoon. Thank you to everyone involved. The examiners: Parisa Mehrkhodavandi (UBC), Bob Davis (MUN) and Peter Warburton (MUN). The chair: Shirley Solberg (MUN). The staff in the School of Graduate Studies and the members of the chemistry department who came out to offer support incl. current and past supervisory committee members, Louise Dawe and Chris Kozak.

Nduka Ikpo 002

Nduka Ikpo 003



Carbon Dioxide Copolymerization by Aluminum Catalysts – Perspective/Review Published

Fran, Nduka (PhD 2008-2013) and Jenna (PhD 2011-2015) wrote a short review article on copolymerization of carbon dioxide with epoxides late last year and early this year. It has been accepted for publication in a special issue of Dalton Transactions on the topic of “Advances in Metal-Catalysed Polymerisation and Related Transformations”. Although Aluminum catalysts are generally less-reactive than some state of the art catalysts for such reactions, there is significant scope to develop new systems based on this cheap metal. For example, Aluminum can catalyse many different types of polymerization reactions and so one could imagine preparing terpolymers (polymers made up of 3 different sub-units/monomers) or even more complex materials.

Here is a link to the article: http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2013/dt/c3dt00049d

Graphical Abstract for Perspective on Al catalysts for carbon dioxide-epoxide copolymerizations

Graphical Abstract for Perspective on Al catalysts for carbon dioxide-epoxide copolymerizations