Where am I? > Home > News > Chemistry

New molecules created by UC Riverside chemists have wide applications

Science Centric | 26 October 2009 15:43 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Leave a comment Decrease text size Increase text size
DON'T MISS —
Chemists synthesise herbal alkaloid
Chemists synthesise herbal alkaloid — [16 Apr 2009] — The club moss Lycopodium serratum is a creeping, flowerless plant used in homeopathic medicine to treat a wide variety of...
New $11 million centre to speed drug discovery process
New $11 million centre to speed drug discovery process — [21 Oct 2008] — Scientists from three Chicago-area universities have joined forces to develop new ways of building state-of-the-art chemical...
Panoramic view into the microcosm
Panoramic view into the microcosm — [8 Sep 2008] — What looks like the intricate makings of a futuristic sculptor is the product of nature itself. The spherical spores of the...
Novel method 'self-assembles' metal atoms into porous nanostructures
Novel method 'self-assembles' metal atoms into porous nanostructures — [1 Jul 2008] — For 5,000 years the only way to shape metal has been by the 'heat and beat' technique. Even with modern nanotechnology, metalworking...
More Chemistry...

Researchers at the University of California, Riverside have successfully created in the laboratory a class of carbenes, highly reactive molecules, used to make catalysts - substances that facilitate chemical reactions. Until now, chemists believed these carbenes, called 'abnormal N-heterocyclic carbenes' or aNHCs, were impossible to make.

Carbenes are made up of unusual carbon atoms and are usually unstable in nature. They attach themselves to metals to form metal-carbene complexes that serve as efficient catalysts used widely in the pharmaceutical industry.

The metal-carbene complexes are formed in two ways: (a) the complex is created in one step, without first preparing carbene independently, and (b) a metal and an independent carbene are brought together to make the complex.

Most often the metal used in a metal-carbene complex is rhodium, gold, platinum or palladium - all of which are very expensive and, in some cases, even toxic. To bring down the cost of catalysts, when possible, carbenes are used independently (without metals) in many chemical reactions.

Until now, aNHCs have been used as only metal-carbene complexes, never independently. Chemists had assumed that aNHCs cannot exist freely, which made them impossible to make.

Now UC Riverside's Guy Bertrand, a distinguished professor of chemistry, and colleagues have challenged that assumption by successfully creating aNHCs that are metal-free and can be used to make any desired complex.

'Many chemical species are believed to be unstable because they do not obey the rules we learned at school, and consequently nobody tries to make them,' said Bertrand, who led the research project. 'The role of scientists, however, is to challenge former hypotheses. That is just what we did in the case of the aNHCs, and we were successful.

'The aNHCs are stable at room temperature both in the solid state and in solution, which means their application as metal-free catalysts is extremely wide, greatly benefiting industry by making possible scores of new chemical reactions.'

Results of the study appear in the Oct. 23 issue of Science.

'This study, reporting the synthesis and characterisation of an entirely different class of metal-free NHCs, could open new horizons and have a huge impact on the field of catalysis,' said John Schwab, who oversees organic synthesis grants at the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of General Medical Sciences. 'The potential applications to drug discovery and manufacture are exciting, since catalytic processes can help keep costs in check and be environmentally friendly, to boot.'

Bertrand is interested in making aNHCs commercially available. 'We hope many chemists in the world will use these carbenes and find some new applications,' he said.

The UCR Office of Technology Commercialisation has filed a patent application on the technology and is currently seeking partners in industry interested in developing the technology commercially.

An internationally renowned scientist, Bertrand came to UCR in 2001 from France's national research agency, the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS). He is the director of the UCR-CNRS Joint Research Chemistry Laboratory.

A recipient of numerous awards and honours, most recently he won the 2009-2010 Sir Ronald Nyholm Prize for his seminal research on the chemistry of phosphorus-phosphorus bonds and the chemistry of stable carbenes and their complexes.

He is a recipient of the Japanese Society for Promotion of Science Award, the French-German Humboldt Award, and the International Council on Main Group Chemistry Award. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences, and a member of the French Academy of Sciences, the European Academy of Sciences, Academia Europea, and Academies des Technologies.

He has authored more than 300 scholarly papers and holds 35 patents.

Bertrand was joined in the research by Eugenia Aldeco-Perez, Amos J. Rosenthal, and Bruno Donnadieu of UCR; and Gernot Frenking and Pattiyil Parameswaran of Phillips-Universitat Marburg, Germany.

Source: University of California - Riverside

SEM image of the micro-doughnuts, (c) Royal Society of ChemistryCells have an appetite for micro-doughnuts

— 25 June 2008

Just like humans, liver cells can't resist eating just one or two small doughnuts, say chemists from Scotland in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Chemical Communications. Exploiting... — full story

Three different pumice samples, (c) Vienna University of TechnologyPumice as a time witness

— 23 June 2008

A chemist of Vienna University of Technology demonstrates how chemical fingerprints of volcanic eruptions and numerous pumice lump finds from archaeological excavations illustrate relations... — full story

Scanning electron microscope image of the gold triangles showing their well defined crystal shape, (c) CSIROResearcher discovers natural 'invisible' gold

— 23 June 2008

Nanoparticles of gold too small to be seen with the naked eye have been created in laboratories, but up until now, have never been seen in nature. The search for these natural but 'invisible'... — full story

Researchers report a new method of depositing bacterial cellulose on plant fibres to enhance durability and strength of composite materials, (c) American Chemical SocietyCoats of cellulose from bacteria yield greener, stronger natural composites

— 16 June 2008

Researchers in the United Kingdom report the first use of bacteria to deposit sticky coatings of cellulose on the surfaces of plant fibres, a process that may expand the use of natural... — full story


Popular tags in Chemistry: atoms · carbon · catalyst · metal