6th International Conference on Green and Sustainable Chemistry
GSC-‐6
University Park Nottingham 4-‐7 August 2013 Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 1 of 21
Welcome to Nottingham
Welcome to GSC-‐6! This meeting is the end point of over 18 months of planning and hard work by the local team, we would lie to thank all of our presenters, delegates, sponsors and exhibitors for their efforts and indeed time. The Organising Committee of the 6th International Conference on Green and Sustainable Chemistry (GSC-‐6) welcomes you to University Park which is The University of Nottingham’s largest campus at 330 acres; it has been part of the University since 1929 when it was given to the University as a gift by The Lord Trent, Sir Jessie Boot, founder of Boots the Chemist. In Nottingham, that dismal town where I went to school and college, they've built a new university for a new dispensation of knowledge. Built it most grand and cakeily out of the noble loot derived from shrewd cash-‐chemistry by good Sir Jesse Boot.
[DH Lawrence, 1929]
Nottingham has a rich heritage and identity in the development of chemistry both academically and indeed industrially. The famous “Boots” brand was established in 1849 with the opening of a “druggist” shop in the city centre. Nottingham is the birthplace of ibuprofen, discovered in the 1950s by researchers at Boots; the anti-‐inflammatory drug is still one of the largest “over the counter” medicines produced. The post patent BHC route to ibuprofen is one of the best examples of process refinement for increased sustainability and is used globally as an exemplar of the philosophies that underpin green chemistry. The venue for GSC-‐6, University Park campus is widely regarded as one of the largest and most attractive in the country. Set in extensive greenery and around a lake, University Park is the focus of life for students, staff and visitors. The campus has been a Civic Trust Green Flag Award Winner every year since 2003 – the only university campus to achieve this status in the UK. We hope you will enjoy the walks and gardens of the University Park during breaks in the programme. This is, thus, a unique opportunity for our community to showcase some of the finest examples in modern chemistry. We hope that GSC-‐6 becomes a melting pot for the presentation of new science, stimulating vibrant discussion and knowledge exchange. We hope that friendships and made, collaborations formed and above all that progress is initiated in this ever important field of science With our warmest regards, The Executive Committee on July 15th, 2013, Nottingham.
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 2 of 21
Thank you to our Sponsors The organisers and advisory board of GSC-6 would like to thank their sponsors and exhibitors for supporting this activity. Sponsors
Exhibitors
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 3 of 21
Conference Programme 6th International Conference on Green and Sustainable Chemistry (GSC-‐6) th Sunday 4 August 2013 15.30-‐ Registration 18.00 Conference Registration will be held in the Main Foyer of the Engineering and Science Learning Centre (ESLC) (ESLC is building number 54 on the attached campus map) 18.00-‐ Welcome (Prof Chris Rudd, PVC) 18.15 18.15-‐ Plenary -‐-‐-‐-‐ Prof Barry Trost (P1) 19.15 19.15-‐ Mixer and Drinks 21.00 Drinks and Buffet will be served in the ESLC -‐ Room A09/B07-‐8 Posters will be located in the ESLC – Rooms B01, B02 and B14. Exhibition will be in the ESLC Foyer
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
10 60
Page 4 of 21
6th International Conference on Green and Sustainable Chemistry (GSC-‐6) th Monday 5 August 2013 8.30-‐ Plenary Karl A Jorgensen (P2) 9.30
60
9.40-‐ 10.10 10.10-‐ 10.35 10.35-‐ 11.00 11.00-‐ 11.30 11.30-‐ 11.55 11.55-‐ 12.20 12.20-‐ 12.45 12.45-‐ 13.10 13.10-‐ 14.30 14.30-‐ 15.00 15.00-‐ 15.25 15.25-‐ 15.50 15.50-‐ 16.15 16.15-‐ 16.35 16.35-‐ 17.00 17.00-‐ 17.25 17.25-‐ 17.50 17.50-‐ 18.15 18.15-‐ 18.40 18.40-‐ 21.00
20-‐00-‐ 21-‐00
10
Session 1 (Chemistry – X1) Jessop (K1) North (O1)
Session 2 (Chemistry – X2) Fortunak (K2) Voutchkova-‐Kostal (O7)
Quadrelli (O2)
Williams (O8)
25
Howdle (Absract tba)
Coffee (Chemistry Foyer and ESLC) Sheldon (O9)
30 25
30 25
Pollak (O4)
Lee (O10)
25
Zhao (O5)
Hutchison (O11)
25
Marriot (O6)
Prasad (O12)
25
Session 3 (Chemistry – X1) Lester (K3) Adschiri (O13)
Lunch (ESLC -‐ Room A09/B07-‐8) Session 4 (Chemistry – X2) Hessel (K4) Sans (O21)
Session 5 (ESLC C01) Subramaniam (K5) Turner (O29)
Bennett (O14)
Garcia-‐Verdugo (O22)
Funaoka (O30)
25
Luan (O15)
Albini (O23)
Heeres (O31)
25
Piccolo (O16)
80
Coffee (Chemistry Foyer and ESLC) George (O24) Hallet (O32)
30 25
20 25
Rossi (O17)
Casas (O25)
Slattery (O33)
25
Li (O18)
X Zhang (O26)
Bogel-‐Łukasik (O34)
25
El Hiti (O19)
Matsukata (O27)
Kamimura (O35)
25
Yadav (O20)
Tallon (O28)
Desai (O36)
25
Posters & Buffet Drinks and Buffet will be served in the ESLC -‐ Room A09/B07-‐8 Posters will be located in the ESLC – Rooms B01, B02 and B14. Exhibition will be in the ESLC Foyer Business Meeting (GSC Board Only – By Invitation)
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 5 of 21
th
Tuesday 6 August 2013
8.30-‐ 9.30
Plenary Lecture -‐ Prof Jairton DuPont (P3)
60
Session 6 (Chemistry – X1) Kobayashi (K6) Clarke (O37)
Session 7 (Chemistry – X2) Aguiar-‐Ricardo (K7) Forder (O50)
Session 8 (ESLC C01) Peter Dunn (K8) Gallou (O63)
10
Hisaeda (O38)
T Liu (O51)
Sneddon (O64)
25
9.40-‐ 10.10 10.10-‐ 10.35 10.35-‐ 11.00 11.00-‐ 11.30 11.30-‐ 11.55 11.55-‐ 12.20 12.20-‐ 12.45 12.45-‐ 13.10 13.10-‐ 14.30 14.30-‐ 15.00 15.00-‐ 15.25 15.25-‐ 15.50 15.50-‐ 16.15 16.15-‐ 16.35 16.35-‐ 17.00 17.00-‐ 17.25 17.25-‐ 17.50 17.50-‐ 18.15
Hayes (O39)
Coffee (Chemistry Foyer and ESLC) Scott (O52) Gordon (O65)
30 25
30 25
Masui (O40)
Thielemans (O53)
McKechnie (O66)
25
Whiting (O41)
Camp (O54)
Martin Luengo (O67)
25
Kumar (O42)
Pilkington (O55)
Bogel-‐Łukasik (O68)
25
Session 9 (Chemistry – X1) Wassercheid (K9) JG Liu (O43)
Lunch (ESLC -‐ Room A09/B07-‐8) Session 10 (Chemistry – X2) Martin Matute (K10) Thomas (Abstract tba)
Session 11 (ESLC C01) Leitner (K11) Hou (O69)
Chuck (O44)
Iskra (O57)
Prechtl (O70)
25
Hua (O45)
Bianco (O58)
Marr (O71)
25
Hunt (O46)
80
Coffee (Chemistry Foyer and ESLC) Zhu (O59) Gathergood (O72)
30 25
20 25
Titrici (O47)
Sánchez-‐Vicente (O60)
Croft (O73)
25
Wang (O48)
Hori (O61)
Harper (O74)
25
Okuma (O49)
Hubertson Simanjuntak (O62)
Neumann (O75)
25
19.00-‐
Conference Banquet (ticket required) Dining Room, Hugh Stewart Hall
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 6 of 21
th
Wednesday 7 August 2013 8.30-‐ 9.30 9.40-‐ 10.10 10.10-‐ 10.35 10.35-‐ 11.00 11.00-‐ 11.30 11.30-‐ 11.55 11.55-‐ 12.20 12.20-‐ 12.45 12.45-‐ 13.10 13.10-‐ 13.45
Plenary Lecture Prof Isabel Arends (Biocatalysis) (Chemistry -‐ X1) Session 12 Session 13 Session 14 (Chemistry – X1) (Chemistry – X2) (ESLC -‐ C01) Broxterman (K12) Haack (K13) Han (K14) Glueck (O76) Zuin (O82) Goto (O88) Liese (O77) Mitchener (O83) Kawanami (O89) Coffee (Chemistry Foyer and ESLC) Koel (O84) M Zhang (O90) Xu (O85) Velilla-‐Perez (O91) Roth (O86) Joshi (O92) (O87) (O93)
Z Liu (O78) Wilson (O79) Grau (O80) (O81)
Foresight Lecture – Peter Wassercheid – (Forward looking ) Chair Martyn Poliakoff – closing Remarks (Chemistry – X1)
60 10 30 25 25 30 25 25 25 15 30 5
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 7 of 21
List of Contributions – Plenary and Keynote Abstract Number
Details
PI Trost PII Jørgensen
Challenge for Total Synthesis: Atom Economy Organocatalysis –A new tool for the synthesis of optically active molecules
PIII DuPont
Catalysis in and by ionic liquids
PIV Arends
Application of enzymes as sustainable catalysts
F1 Wassercheid
A look forwards!
K1 Jessop
Switchable Water: Aqueous Smart Fluids
K2 Fortunak
Sustainable Access to Medicines Utilizing Green Chemistry
K3 Lester
SHYMAN – Sustainable Hydrothermal Manufacturing of Nanomaterials
K4 Hessel
Novel Process Windows in Flow: From Chemical to Process-‐Design Intensification -‐ from Green Chemistry to Green Engineering Renewable Chemicals: Opportunities and Challenges Catalytic Organic Reactions in Water Greening Tailor Made “Smart” Biomaterials for New Therapies Application of environmental metrics to evaluate green chemistry improvements to the synthesis of (S,S)-‐reboxetine succinate Chemical energy storage systems and related, novel catalytic technologies
K5 Subramaniam K6 Kobayashi K7 Aguiar-‐Ricardo K8 Dunn K9 Wasserscheid K10 Martín-‐Matute K11 Leitner K12 Broxterman K13 Haack K14 Han
Transition Metal-‐Catalyzed Isomerization and Halogenation Reactions in Water “Panta rhei” -‐ An Integrated Approach to Continuous-‐Flow Asymmetric Catalysis Towards The Bio-‐based Economy: Perspectives On Biomass Use For Chemicals Manufacturing Green Chemistry Education: Not Just for Chemists Anymore Properties of Green Solvents and Applications in Green Chemistry
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 8 of 21
List of Contributions – Invited and Contributed Orals Abstract Number
Details
O1 North O2 Quadrelli O3 Howdle
Synthesis of Cyclic carbonates from Waste CO2 And Their Use As Green Polar Aprotic Solvents CO2 conversion: Emerging Large Scale Applications and Selected Recent Results TBA
O4 Pollak
Capture of Carbon Dioxide with Solutions Based on Ionic Liquids
O5 Zhao
O8 Williams
Effects of water on the hydrogenation of o-‐chloronitrobenzene in ethanol, n-‐ heptane and compressed carbon dioxide CO2 Utilisation in the Biorefinery -‐ Old Science or New Opportunities Catalytic Dehydrogenation of Alcohols and using Ag, Pd, Cu and Ir supported on Tunable Hydrotalcites: Towards Mild Dehydrogenation of Alkanes Catalytic Synthesis of Amides
O9 Sheldon
Green, Bio-‐based Solutions for a Sustainable Economy
O10 Lee
Clean Chemical Synthesis via Nanoporous Palladium Catalysts Greener syntheses of ligand-‐stabilized metal oxide nanocrystals Green and Sustainable Chemistry: Chemo-‐enzymatic Conversion of Glucose to Bicyclic Nucleosides and Sugar-‐PEG Polymeric Architectures Green Sustainable Chemistry Aspects of Supercritical Hydrothermal Synthesis -‐Organic Modified Nanoparticles and Fabrication of Hybrid Polymers-‐ Tuning Catalyst Selectivity via Nanoparticle Shape and Topography
O6 Marriott O7 Voutchkova-‐Kostal
O11 Hutchison O12 Prasad O13 Adschiri O14 Bennett O15 Luan O16 Piccolo O17 Rossi O18 Li O19 El-‐Hiti O20 Yadav O21 Sans O22 Garcia-‐Verdugo O23 Albini O24 George O25 Casas
Air stable pyrite FeS2 nanocrystals: facile hydrothermal synthesis and morphology control Heterogeneous Home-‐made Catalysts with a Low Content of Precious Metals and their Application in the Synthesis of Fine Chemicals Metal Nanoparticles for Designed Hydrogenation, Oxidation and Hydroformylation Catalysts Study on the Catalytic Performance of the Catalysts Supported onto Mesoporous Materials by Novel Loading Strategies Sustainable and Greener Chemical Processes: Regioselective Aromatic Substitution Reactions Over Solid Catalysts Science & engineering of pores, particles and interfaces in development of green processes Integrated flow systems employing 3D-‐printed reactionware The Use of Solid Ionic Solvents to Develop Catalytic Continuous Flow Processes Photocatalysis. A Green Synthetic Tool An Example of What Photochemistry Can Do for Green Chemistry Intensification of Supercritical Extraction (SCE) with High-‐Power Ultrasound (HPU) Technology: effects related to process variables and treated material
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 9 of 21
O26 X Zhang
Scale-‐up studies of the electroreduction of oxalic acid to glyoxylic acid
O27 Matsukata O28 Tallon
Prospect of Large-‐scale Energy Saving of Chemical Processes with Membrane Technology Green Solvents for Extraction of Polar Lipids
O29 Turner
Hot Water Extraction and Biocatalysis of Polyphenols in Agricultural Byproducts
O30 Funaoka
Functionality Control of Native Lignins by the Combination of Self-‐ and Cross Condensations A Kinetic Study on the Conversion of Sucrose to Hydroxymethylfurfural and Levulinic Acid Low-‐Cost Ionic Liquids for the Delignification of Lignocellulosic Biomass
O31 Heeres O32 Hallett O33 Slattery O34 Bogel-‐Łukasik
Cheap, readily available ionic liquids for the pre-‐treatment of lignocellulosic materials Lignocellulosic Biomass Fractionation with Ionic Liquids
O35 Kamimura
Use of Ionic liquids in Developing a New Method for Feedstock Recycling
O36 Desai
Extraction of Essential Oil from the Leaves of Lemongrass using Novel Extraction Techniques New Developments In Enantioselective Alkene Carbonylation
O37 Clarke O38 Hisaeda O39 Hayes O40 Masui O41 Whiting O42 Kumar O43 J-‐G Liu O44 Chuck
Bioinspired Catalysts with Cobalt Complexes and Photosensitizers: Lessons from Vitamin B12-‐dependent Enzymes Green Activation of Carboxylic Acids for Amide Bond Formation Direct synthesis of Dimethyl Carbonate from CO2 and MeOH Catalyzed by Sn(Ot-‐Bu)4 with Acid-‐Base Additives, and its Reaction Mechanism Catalytic explorations involving boronates and boronic acids Metal Phthalocyanines: Biomimetic Catalysts for Selective and Sustainable Organic Synthesis Bio-‐inspired Noble-‐metal-‐free Electrocatalysts for Oxygen Reduction Reaction
O46 Hunt
Renewable Liquid Fuels Produced by an Oleaginous Yeast Grown on Waste Resources in Low-‐Cost Non-‐Sterile Conditions Double Acceptors without COOH as Conjugating Anchor for Highly Efficient Dye-‐ Sensitized Solar Cells The Importance of Elemental Sustainability and Recovery
O47 Titrici
Biomass-‐derived Waterborne Carbons for Renewable Energy Applications
O48 Wang O49 Okuma
Efficient production and upgrading of 5-‐hydroxymethylfurfural into liquid biofuels Green synthesis of 2-‐aryl-‐2-‐oxazolines
O50 Forder
Novel Routes to the Controlled Production of Polylactide Copolymers
O51 T Liu
CO2-‐Assisted Manipulation of Isotactic Poly-‐1-‐butente Crystal Modification
O52 Scott
Sustainable Functional Materials Derived from Cellulose
O53 Thielemans
Benign production of polysaccharide aerogels through aqueous nanoparticle assembly
O45 Hua
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 10 of 21
O54 Camp O55 Pilkington O56 Thomas O57 Iskra O58 Bianco O59 Zhu O60 Sánchez-‐Vicente
Harnessing the Reducing Potential of Renewable Sugars to Power Catalytic Processes Ensuring the Sustainability of Artemisinin Production from Artemisia Annua TBA HCl-‐Catalyzed Oxidative Iodination with Iodine and Hydrogen Peroxide – Incidence of Iodine(I) Reagents Preliminary Studies of CALB-‐Catalyzed Acetylation of α-‐Tetralol in the Ionic Liquid [OMPyrr][NTf2] under Microwave Irradiation. Catalytic Conversion of Methanol to Aromatics with Modified zeolite ZSM-‐5
O63 Gallou
Surface Modification of Mesoporous Silica SBA-‐15 with Aminosilanes Using Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Efficient Decomposition of Perfluorinated Ionic Liquid Anions Using Hot Water with Iron: An Essential Step in Recovery of Fluorine Component from the Ionic Liquid Waste Synthesis of Glycerol Carbonate From Glycerol and Dimethyl Carbonate Using CaO : Identification of Active Catalyst Form Early Process Research: An Opportunity for Advances in Green Chemistry
O64 Sneddon
Green & Sustainable Chemistry at GSK – Tools and Practice
O65 Gordon
A Methodological Approach To Sustainable Catalytic Processes
O66 McKechnie
Life Cycle Environmental and Cost Assessment of Ethanol as a Chemical Intermediate Wastes In The Way Towards A Green Economy
O61 Hori
O62 Hubertson Simanjuntak
O67 Martin-‐Luengo O68 Bogel-‐Łukasik O69 Hou O70 Prechtl O71 Marr O72 Gathergood O73 Croft O74 Harper O75 Neumann
O76 Glueck O77 Liese O78 Z Liu O79 Wilson
Green metrics of bio-‐based isoprene and other fuel-‐like products from animal fats The Immobilization of Nano-‐catalysts in Alternative Reaction Media: Application in Selective Hydrogenation C-‐C-‐bond Cleavage and C-‐N-‐bond Formation Reactions with Recyclable Nanoscale Cu2O-‐Catalyst in Ionic Liquids Lowering the Activation Barrier to Bio-‐renewables: Ionic liquids and Catalytic Ionogels The Search for Safer Chemicals: Combined Catalyst Performance, Biodegradation and (Eco)toxicity Studies Getting the Picture: Interactions and Entropy in Ionic Liquids Getting the reaction outcomes you want in ionic liquids: Towards solvent-‐ controlled reactivity Degradability of ionic liquids -‐ Systematic investigations on aerobic and anaerobic biodegradability and hydrolytical stability of ionic liquid cations and anions -‐ contributions to a sound hazard assessment Biocatalytic Carboxylation and Asymmetric Hydration of Aromatics – Two 'Green' Strategies from the Biosynthetic Toolbox Increase of Sustainability in (Bio)Chemical Synthesis by Reaction Engineering Lewis Acid-‐Promoted Glycerol Conversion to Lactic Acid and Formic Acid Tailored Solid Acid Catalysts for Biomass Conversion
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 11 of 21
O80 Grau
Hop for Green Polymer Materials
O81
TBA
O82 Zuin
Green Chemistry in Teacher Training: a Brazilian Case Study
O83 Mitchener
New Product Development For Green Manufacturing
O84 Koel
The influence of green chemistry on analytical chemistry
O85 Xu
Operando Raman spectroscopy and kinetic study of low-‐temperature CO oxidation on an α-‐Mn2O3 nanocatalyst Supercritical Water in Analytical Chemistry: A Green Solvent to Manipulate Fused-‐Silica Capillaries for Separation Methods TBC
O86 Roth O87 O88 Goto O89 Kawanami O90 M Zhang O91 Velilla-‐Pérez O92 Joshi O93
Hybrid Extraction Process for Phytochemicals Using Supercritical CO2 and Liquid Water Simple C-‐O bond cleavage of diaryl ether in scCO2/water biphasic medium with H2 Synthesis and characterization of MnOx–CeO2 catalyst by supercritical anti-‐ solvent precipitation Quantitative Analysis of Products from Lignin Depolymerisation in High Temperature Water Levulinic Acid from Cellulose by Hydrothermal Treatment Using Zirconia as a Solid Acid Catalyst TBC
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 12 of 21
List of Contributions – Poster Presentations Abstract Number
Details
P1 Park P2 Pham
Fabrication of Poly(g-‐glutamic acid) Monolith by Thermally Induced Phase Separation and Salt Leaching Technique Oxidative N-‐Demethylation of Tropane Alkaloids Using a FeIII-‐TAML Catalyst
P3 Wagner
Conversion of sterol-‐rich microbial oils into transportation fuels
P4 Martín
Microwave-‐Assisted Alkali Pretreatment and Saccharification of Rice Hulls and Tobacco Waste Characterization of Silica Aerogels Prepared in Supercritical CO2
P5 Ozcan P6 Wang
P10 Antônio
Manganese Oxide/Graphene nanowires as Effective Catalysts for Rechargeable Li-‐ O2 Battery 20% Cs-‐substituted Dodecatungstophophoric acid (Cs-‐DTP) supported on Silica Meso Cellular Foam for acetylation of anisyl alcohol Electrochemical regulation of bacterial metabolism for developing novel energy conversion systems Waste to Wealth: Renewable lipids from Rhodotorula glutinis cultured on waste resources Green synthesis of 2-‐aryl-‐2-‐oxazolines
P11 Giray
Green and Efficient Synthesis of Xanthanes in Supercritical Diethylether
P12 Whiffin
Developing a palm oil substitute from yeast cultivated on waste resources
P13 Donnelly
Determination of the Physical Properties and the Subsequent Viability of a Host of Potential Alternative Aviation Fuels REACH and its Impact – Towards Greener Solvents
P7 Bhadra P8 Matsuda P9 Sargeant
P14 Fisk P15 Pinazo P16 Mikami P17 Sun
Sustainability Metrics of Fermentative Succinic Acid Production and Its One-‐Pot Catalytic Valorization into γ-‐Butyrolactone over Metal Supported Catalysts Reduction of Nitrate with Formic Acid over Pd-‐Sn/TiO2 Catalyst
P23 Choi
Poly(vinyl alcohol)/Sodium Alginate Blend Monolith via Thermally Impacted Non-‐ Solvent Induced Phase Separation Two in One -‐ New Thiolate Iron Porphyrins That Catalyze Both Photocathodic Reduction of CO2 and Anodic Oxidation of Hydrocarbons Hybrid Acid Catalyzed Direct Methyl Levulinate Synthesis from Woody Biomass Resources Separation of Complex Mixtures using Supercritical CO2 with Solid Adsorbents – an Economic Large Scale Alternative to Supercritical Fluid Chromatography Comparison of Three Vegetable Oils for Biodiesel Production with Supercritical Fluids Biodiesel Production Using Supercritical Methanol in a Continuous Reactor: Effect of Carbon Dioxide Cosolvent Reduction of Petrochemical Waste through Nanotechnology
P24 Yoda
Polymer foam-‐silica nanocomposites for green thermal insulating materials
P25 Masuda
Real-‐time Analysis of Sc(III)-‐Catalyzed Hydroxymethylation Reactions in Water Using DART®-‐MS
P18 Li P19 Nemoto P20 Marriott P21 García-‐Jarana P22 Casas
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 13 of 21
P26 Liu P27 Fuku P28 Parker P29 Mashkovsky
P30 Riekkola P31 Morofuji P32 Niikuni P33 Norcott P34 Gök P35 Rautiainen P36 Fukuda P37 Jenkins P38 Nanayakkara P39 Shaheen
A Novel Fluidized Bed Dryer for Biomass Drying Based on Self-‐Heat Recuperation Technology Enhanced Catalysis by Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance of Size-‐ and Color-‐ controlled Ag Prepared Using Microwave and Mesopore Structure Novel Catalysts for the Controlled Depolymerization of Lignin Effect of Alloying and Preparation Methods on the Performance of Pd-‐ supported Bimetallic Catalysts in Stereoselective Semihydrogenation of Diphenylacetylene Microwave Assisted Dehydration of Sorbitol C−H Amination and C−H / C−H Cross-‐Coupling of Aromatic Compounds using Electrochemical Oxidation A valuation of environmental cost reduction by employing EV/HEV technology for regional CDM(Clean Development Mechanism) Extending On-‐Water Catalysis in Organic Synthesis Impregnation of Benzoic Acid onto Modified Bentonite by Using Supercritical CO2 Base-‐free Oxidation of Glucose on Gold Catalysts Preparation of Layered Nano Composites by Self Assembly Reaction of Amino Acid and Metal Hydroxide Development and testing of alternative fermentation fuels for aviation and road transport Depolymerization of Lignin Using Redistribution Mechanism in Green Solvents
P44 Kosa
Zinc monoglycerolate (ZMG)-‐catalyzed, solvent free synthesis of cyclic carbonates from 1,2-‐polyols for application in the osmotic protection of clays Hydrothermal Carbonization of Sugars and Rice Straw in the Presence of Sulfuric Acid Ozonization of Olefins with High Purity Ozone in Carbon Dioxide and Study of their Safety Highly Efficient Endo-‐ and Enantioselective [3+2] Cycloadditions of α-‐Amino Esters to Olefins Catalyzed by Cu(I) Amide Complexes Novel Green Reaction Process Using Pulsed Discharge Plasma at Gas-‐Liquid Interface Preparation and surface characterization of CuO and Fe2O3 catalyst
P45 d’Alessandro
Lignin stabilised Pd and Pt nanoparticles in catalytic reduction reactions
P46 Agoudjil P47 Wang
Synthesis and characterization of polysaccharide / polysiloxane Biohybrids and biocomposites Composition of black sesame oil extracted by scCO2 and its nutraceutical applications A Comparative Evaluation Of Microwave-‐Integrated Soxhlet And Conventional Soxhlet Extraction Methods For The Hypoglycemic And Hypolipidaemic Potential Of Jordanian Psidium guajava Fruit Peel Extracts Aluminum-‐Catalyzed Direct Substitution of Alcohols, Including Electron withdrawing Group Substituted Benzhydrols Recycling CO2 into fuels with high-‐pressure synthesized photoelectrocatalysts
P40 Watanabe P41 Yoshida P42 Yoshimoto P43 Hayashi
P48 Issa
P49 Nakahara
P50 Tostón P51 Rechak
Pharmacokinetics behavior of verapamil after intravenous and oral administration of valproic acid in rats by HPLC
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 14 of 21
P52 Clough P53 Ohtaka P54 Yang P55 Ning
Decomposition of Imidazolium Carboxylate Ionic Liquids: Trends, Mechanisms and Long-‐Term Thermal Stability A Recyclable “Boomerang” Linear Polystyrene-‐Stabilized Pd Nanoparticles for C-‐ C Coupling Reaction in Water Efficient Absorption of SO2 by Functionalized Ionic Liquids
P60 Peng
Dehydration of Carbohydrates to 5-‐hydroxymethylfurfural in Ionic Liquids Catalyzed by Tin(IV) Phosphonate and Zirconium Phosphonate Efficient Synthesis of Cyclic Carbonates from CO2 and Epoxides Catalyzed by KI/cucurbit[6]uril Efficient Synthesis of Quinazoline-‐2,4(1H,3H)-‐diones from CO2 and 2-‐ Aminobenzonitriles in Water without any Catalyst Phase Equilibrium Calculation of Supercritical Fluid-‐Solid Systems by Considering the Molecular Clusters as a Phase Immobilization of Ru Nanoparticles on the Metal-‐Organic Framework with both Micropores and Mesopores using Supercritical Fluids n Study on the Fragmentation Pathway of Aconitine by ESI-‐MS
P61 Lester
A Multifaceted Catalysis Approach to Nitrile Activation
P62 Restani
Multifunctional PURE-‐type dendrimers: Sustainable Strategies to Improve Their Pharmacokinetic Performance Chemical recycling of the foamed phenol resin by solubilization in high -‐ temperature fluids Applications of CO2 in Novel Reaction Work-‐up Procedures
P56 Shi P57 Ma P58 Hou P59 Wu
P63 Sugeno P64 Kulik P65 Bishopp P66 Atmaca P67 Seth P68 Woodward P69 Matsuda
Continuous Conversion and Separation of Liquid-‐Liquid Biphasic Reaction Systems Efficient Green Procedures for Preparation of Novel Zinc Phthalocyanines Containing Alkynyl Moieties Generic Method to Prepare Ultra-‐small Transition Metal Nanoparticles And Their Catalytic Applications The Enzymatic Degradation of Lignin
P72 Ashworth
Isomerization of Glucose with Solid Base Catalysts in Ionic Liquid -‐Water Solutions Optimization of Biocatalysed Kinetic Resolutions in the Synthesis of Some Enantiopure Hydroxy-‐N-‐Heterocycles Heck Strategy to Neoflavonoid Synthesis Using Solid Supported Pd(0) Nanoparticles as Recyclable Heterogeneous Catalyst Interactions within the Choline Chloride – Urea Deep Eutectic Solvent
P73 Portela
Supercritical water gasification of cellulosic wastes
P74 Hao
P76 Starkey
Carbon Sequestration through Mineralization Process by Using Magnesium Chloride Solution Sustainable, Mild and Efficient p-‐Methoxybenzyl Ether Deprotections Utilising Catalytic DDQ Continuous Hydrothermal Synthesis of Novel Nanomaterials
P77 Wang
Hydrogen Transfer Initiated Dehydration of 1,3-‐propanediol in Ionic Liquids
P78 Pérez
Green Chemistry at Addis Ababa University
P79 de Ory
Pressured Alkaline Peroxide Pretreatment For Enhancing The Enzymatic Hydrolysis of Rice Hulls
P70 Piccolo P71 Sharma
P75 Walsh
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 15 of 21
P80 Noé P81 Gammons P82 Murai
A Versatile Pinner Preparation of Oerthoesters. The model Case of Trimethylorthobenzoate Investigating Ionic Liquids For The Pre-‐Treatment Of Lignocellulosic Materials
P85 Bayliss
Multistep structural control of native lignins ~Functionality control and application of lignins by acylation~ Solid Acid Catalyst Generated from Sulfonation of Coffee Residue Activated Carbon for Esterification of Caprylic Acid Standardization of environmental designs input into lignocellulosics -‐ From wood to universal and functional composites under the basic environment Greener Synthesis of Metal Organic Frameworks in High Temperature Water
P86 Sanchez-‐Segado
Concentration of Rare-‐Earth Oxides from Titaniferous Sands
P87 Aoyagi and Funaoka P88 Chauhan
Thermal Properties of Lignophenols with Different Grafting Phenols
P89 Foltran
On the chemical fixation of supercritical carbon dioxide with epoxides catalyzed by ionic liquids: A combined spectroscopic and computational study. Supercritical Fluid-‐Assisted Hydrogenation of Wastes to Fuel-‐Like Products
P83 Ngaosuwan P84 Yukari Uehara
P90 Morais P91 Uyama P92 Zhang P93 Martin-‐Luengo P94 Wang P95 Xi P96 Clarke P97 Schmitz P98 Grignard P99 Makhijani P100 Kumar P101 Bhatt P102 Quraishi P103 Vanamudan P104 Muhamad P105 Pedotti P106 Raghasudha P107 Gimeno-‐Fabra
Bioinspired Biomass-‐based Green Particulates for Industrial Applications
CO2 Uptake over Highly Porous N-‐doped Activated Carbon Monoliths Prepared by Physical Activation Effect of MoO3 on the heat resistant performance of nickel based MCM-‐41 methanation catalysts Advanced Uses of Wastes Towards a Bio Based Economy The Production of Levulinic Acid from Cellulose Catalyzed by Niobium-‐based Porous Solid Acid and its Upgrading to γ-‐Valerolactone Catalytic conversion of cellulose into isosorbide over mesoporous niobium phosphate-‐based heterogeneous catalyst via a sequential process X-‐ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy of Ionic Liquids and Ionic Liquid Metal Solutions Asymmetric hydrogenation of challenging substrates using SILP/scCO2-‐Systems in continuous-‐flow Toward the synthesis of cyclic carbonate by chemical fixation of carbon dioxide onto epoxides, a kinetic study by Raman spectroscopy under pressure Use of Pectin as Green Additive in Conversion of Non-‐biodegradable Polythene into Degradable one Conversion of Non-‐biodegradable Polythene into degradable one by using Green additivies Removal Of Chromium(VI) From Aqueous Solutions And Chrome-‐Plating Effluents Using Zirconium Phosphate Impregnated Chitosan Development and Electrochemical Investigation of Green Corrosion Inhibitors Green Facile Synthesis Of Guargum Stabilised Silver Nanoparticles And Their Application in the Degradation Of Environmental Pollutants Kinetic studies and performance parameter of acid digestion of bioethanol production from agricultural waste Mild hydrolytic cleavage of α-‐ ferrocenylalkyl-‐O-‐methyl ethers Synthesis and Characterization of Co-‐Cr Nano ferrites by Citrate-‐Gel Auto combustion Green method Instant MOFs: continuous synthesis of MOFs by rapid solvent mixing
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 16 of 21
P108 Ghafari
Kinetic Study of Phenol Biodegradation by a Microalgae-‐Bacterium Consortium
P109 Mortezayikia P110 Shridharan
Carbon Dioxide Biofixation using Microalgae in Hollow Fiber Membrane Photo-‐ Bioreactors (HFMPB) Palm Oil Mill Effluent (POME) Polishing Using Activated Carbon and Novel Ultrasound Cavitation Technology Synthesis of Ionic Liquids in an Annular Micro-‐reactor -‐ Experimental and Theoretical Studies for 1-‐ethyl-‐3-‐methylimidazolium ethylsulfate A General Continuous Flow Hydrothermal Route to Metal Sulphide Nanoparticles Investigating the Mechanical Properties of Myglamophae Spider Silk
P111 Lange P112 Dunne P113 Hindley P114 Housley
P115 Blundell P116 Bogel-‐Łukasik P117 Amara
P118 Duma P119 Miazek P120 Schofield P121 Bellamy P122 Skilton P123 Prechtl
The Use of Dimensionless Groups to Analyse the Mixing of Streams with Large Density Differences and the Application to the Oxidation of p-‐Xylene in Sub-‐ and Supercritical Water. X-‐ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy of Phosphonium Ionic Liquids Green metrics of bio-‐based isoprene and other fuel-‐like products from animal fats Advances in challenging catalytic continuous flow heterogeneous hydrogenations Protic Amino Acid-‐based Ionic Liquids: A Green Synthetic Approach Growth of Chlorella in vanillin enriched medium A Process for the Production of Methacrylic Acid Cleaner continuous photo-‐oxidation in scCO2 using singlet oxygen and fluorous biphasic catalysis AUTOMATED RAPID SELF OPTIMISING REACTORS Opportunities for Hydrogen Storage Material Blends: The Role of Ionic Liquids
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 17 of 21
Getting to Nottingham These notes are provided In addition to the general directions that may be accessed on the webpages of the University of Nottingham: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/about/visitorinformation/information.aspx
Your destination is University Park, directions can be found here:
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/about/visitorinformation/mapsanddirections/universityparkcampus.aspx
More information about travel to Nottingham and vacation activities that you may consider can be found on the Experience Nottinghamshire webpage: http://www.experiencenottinghamshire.com/
IMPORTANT TRAVEL INFORMATION For those travelling by car: It is recommended that the University is approached from junction 25 of the M1 not junction 24, as there are major roadworks on the A453 between the J24 of the M1 and Nottingham. For those travelling by train: There is major signalling work due to be carried out at Nottingham railway station this summer. As a result, Nottingham railway station will be closed and national rail services will not service the city. Railway journeys will terminate as East Midlands Parkway which is nearby. Tickets to Nottingham will still be valid, and a free replacement bus service will be operating regularly between East Midlands Parkway and Nottingham to ensure that there is as little disruption to your journeys as possible. When you arrive at Nottingham railway station an efficient taxi service will be available from the signposted rank, the cost will be cost between £6 and £8 depending on traffic. The address that you will need to give to the taxi driver is as follows.
Orchard Hotel, University Park, The University of Nottingham, NG7 2RJ. or Hugh Stewart Hall, University Park, The University of Nottingham, NG7 2QX. Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 18 of 21
From East Midlands Airport (Local connections to EU and the UK) From East Midlands Airport you can take the Trent Barton Indigo Skylink bus to Nottingham, which leaves every 30 minutes and stops at Abbey Street (Circled as B2 on map), about 400m from the Chemistry Department. Buses leave from outside the Airport Arrivals hall, Busses are regular and a timetable may be downloaded at the following link. https://www.trentbarton.co.uk/services/skylinknottingham
You may also wish to take a taxi from the rank on the terminal forecourt. The cost of a one way journey is approximately £20. The address that you will need to give to the taxi driver is as follows:
Orchard Hotel, University Park, The University of Nottingham, NG7 2RJ. or Hugh Stewart Hall, University Park, The University of Nottingham, NG7 2QX.
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 19 of 21
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 20 of 21
Updated 04/08/2013 12:58
Page 21 of 21