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Catalysis, atom economy and green toxicology: Tools for sustainab | 25635
Organic Chemistry: Current Research

Organic Chemistry: Current Research
Open Access

ISSN: 2161-0401

Catalysis, atom economy and green toxicology: Tools for sustainable chemistry and drug discovery


International Summit on Past and Present Research Systems of Green Chemistry

August 25-27, 2014 Hilton Philadelphia Airport, USA

Nicholas Gathergood

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Organic Chem Curr Res

Abstract :

Sustainable chemistry research projects combine three fields of green chemistry; ionic liquids, eco (toxicity) assessment and catalysis. One study is directed towards ionic liquids which can also catalyse reactions. This overlap between organocatalysis and ionic liquid research enables us to design low toxicity and potentially biodegradable catalysts based on the extensive biological screening data of ionic liquids. Assessment of the performance of a new catalyst, in tandem with the (eco) toxicity screening and biodegradation testing allows the chemist to develop greener synthetic methods. A library of aprotic ionic liquids which can act as Br�nsted acid catalysts with low antibacterial and antifungal activity has been designed. Toxicity evaluation of all the ionic liquids prepared was performed to establish the influence of ester or amide groups in the cation. Antifungal and antibacterial toxicity results show that the ionic liquids did not inhibit the growth of any organism screened at concentrations of 2.0 mM. Biodegradation of the novel ionic liquids was also investigated in ?CO2 Headspace? test (ISO 14593). Latest work which includes green chemistry metrics feedback, investigates the effect of substitution on the imidazolium ring on biodegradation, toxicity and activity of the catalyst. This enables our team to recommend the ?greenest? catalyst of our series for further applications. The second part of the talk will introduce the concept that drug discovery can be linked to the search for novel sustainable catalyst scaffolds.

Biography :

Nicholas Gathergood received his PhD from the University of Southampton, UK in 1998. He received his postdoctoral positions with Prof. Karl Anker J�rgensen at Aarhus University, Denmark and Prof. Peter Scammells at Monash University in Australia followed. Since 2004, he is a lecturer of organic chemistry at Dublin City University with interests in catalysis, medicinal chemistry and biodegradation. He was chairman of the SCI, Irish section from 2007-2010 and a founding member of the EUCHEMS Division of Organic Chemistry established in 2007. His work regularly appears in prestigious green and sustainable chemistry journals.

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