An interview with Martyn Poliakoff

Martyn Poliakoff is a Professor of Chemistry at the University of Nottingham, and the out-going Chair of the Green Chemistry Editorial Board.  As he steps down after leading the Journal for the last six years, Martyn took a few moments to talk to us about how he was inspired to become a chemist and how he sees the field of green chemistry developing in the future…

Who or what initially inspired you to become a chemist?

My father and grandfather were physicists.  From as young as I can remember, it was always assumed that I would become a scientist.  I was lucky to have inspirational physics and chemistry teachers, David Hepburn-Scott and Tony Roberts.  I was not good enough at maths to become a physicist but Tony Roberts really inspired me to focus on chemistry and I am still in contact with him nearly 50 years later.  (Find out more here)

What have you enjoyed most during your time as Chair of the Editorial Board of Green Chemistry?

I have really enjoyed meeting a variety of green chemists and also it has been a pleasure to promote the Journal across the world. 

What do you consider to be the most significant development on the Journal during your time as Chair?

I think there have been three important developments during my tenure.  Firstly, the greatly increased Impact Factor; the friendly rivalry with ChemComm has been a great spur to us all. Secondly, the increased rejection rate (including at least one paper of mine!) indicates not only that the Journal has become a more attractive place to publish but also that the standard of Green Chemistry publications is increasing.  Thirdly, the appearance of at least three new journals in this area clearly demonstrates that the foresight of the RSC in recognising the potential of green chemistry.  I am determined that our Journal shall remain the market leader.

What do you see as the biggest challenge facing the field of green chemistry?

Click here to read more…

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3rd Asian-Pacific Conference on Ionic Liquids and Green Processes

The 3rd Asian-Pacific Conference on Ionic Liquids and Green Processes (APCIL’12) will be held in Beijing, China between the 17th-19th September 2012.  The main theme of this conference is ionic liquids for low carbon and sustainable development.

Topics to be covered at APCIL’12 include:

  • Modeling and Computation
  • Structure, Spectroscopy and Thermodynamics
  • New Materials and Compounds
  • Syntheses and Catalysis
  • Separation and Transport Processes
  • Electrochemical and Energy Applications
  • Sustainable and Environmental Technologies
  • Process Engineering and Industrial Applications

Invited plenary speakers include Professor Kenneth Seddon (Queen’s University Belfast, UK), Professor Robin D. Rogers (University of Alabama, USA), Professor Douglas McFarlane (University of Monash, Australia) and Professor Buxing Han (Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China).  For a full list of all invited (plenary and keynote) speakers, click here.

The conference will be held at the Jiuhua Resort Convention Centre in Beijing – more information about the venue and accommodation can be found here.

Register for this conference now!

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New Editorial Board Chair for Green Chemistry

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Walter Leitner as the new Chair of the Green Chemistry Editorial Board. 

Walter Leitner

Walter Leitner

Walter is a full professor at Technische Chemie und Petrolchemie, Institut für Technische Chemie und Makromolekulare Chemie at the RWTH Aachen University and has been involved in the development of the Journal through his role as Scientific Editor. We look forward to the start of a new era with Walter as Chair of the Green Chemistry Editorial Board.

Martyn Poliakoff

The start of a new era must, unfortunately, see the end of another and after six years as Chair of the Editorial Board Martyn Poliakoff is stepping down.  Green Chemistry is privileged to have been guided by one of the most prominent green chemists and we wish to thank Martyn for all his hard work and endless enthusiasm he has brought to the Journal.  Martyn bids the journal farewell in a recently published editorial entitled ‘Paul Anastas and the Robin Hood Question’
Intrigued? Find out more by reading the Editorial here.

Keep up-to-date with the latest content in Green Chemistry by registering for our free table of contents alerts.

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Catalytic mechanism of KI and co-catalytic mechanism of hydroxyl substances for cycloaddition of CO2 with propylene oxide

Chinese scientists provide a clear picture of the cycloaddition of carbon dioxide (CO2) and epoxides promoted by the KI/hydroxyl catalytic system.

Over recent years, the KI/hydroxyl catalytic system has been recognised as one of the most successful and important routes to convert CO2 into value-added chemicals; for example, cyclic carbonates.  However, the catalytic mechanism is not clear.  In this work, Buxing Han and colleagues from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China, demonstrate a theoretical approach to clarify the catalytic mechanism of KI and the co-catalytic mechanism of hydroxyl substances.  The authors employed density functional theory method to determine the transition structures, rate-determining steps and lowest energy barrier reaction pathways for both gas phase and solvent conditions.  It was found that a ternary synergistic catalytic system was formed between the hydroxyl groups, the potassium cation and the iodine anion, I–(–OH)–K+.

This article is free to access until the 4th September 2012!  Click on the link below to find out more…

The catalytic mechanism of KI and the co-catalytic mechanism of hydroxyl substances for cycloaddition of CO2 with propylene oxide, Jun Ma, Jinli Liu, Zhaofu Zhang and Buxing Han, Green Chem., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35711A

You may also be interested in this article – free to access for 2 weeks:

One-pot conversion of CO2 and glycerol to value-added products using propylene oxide as the coupling agent, Jun Ma, Jinliang Song, Huizhen Liu, Jinli Liu, Zhaofu Zhang, Tao Jiang, Honglei Fan and Buxing Han, Green Chem., 2012, 14, 1743-1748

Organotin-oxomolybdate coordination polymer as catalyst for synthesis of unsymmetrical organic carbonates, Jinliang Song, Binbin Zhang, Tainbin Wu, Guanying Yang and Buxing Han, Green Chem., 2011, 13, 922-927

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Frontiers in Biorefining 2012 – 30th October-2nd November

The 2nd International Conference ‘Frontiers in Biorefining‘ on Chemicals and Products from Renewable Carbon is being held between the 30th October-2nd November 2012 at the King and Prince Beach & Golf Resort, St Simons Island, Georgia USA. 

The event will be hosted by the University of Tennessee’s Centre for Renewable Carbon in partnership with the Southeastern Regional Sun Grant Centre, and will emphasize the latest developments on the transformation of renewable carbon building blocks to chemicals and materials, enabling the integrated biorefinery concept.  The tentative sessions planned for the event are:

  • Biorefinery concepts for chemicals and products
  • From pretreatment to fractionation
  • Chemicals from carbohydrates
  • Catalysis in the biorefinery
  • Advances in analytical techniques
  • Chemicals from lignin
  • Developing the industrial biorefinery

The deadline for submission of abstracts is the 17th August 2012 – click here for more details about the requirements and full instructions on how to submit.

Early Bird registration for the conference ends on the 15th August 2012 – to register, click here.

Visit the conference website for further information – http://www.fib2012.org/

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Renewable plasticizer alcohols by formal anti-Markovnikov hydration of terminal branched chain alkenes

Plasticizer alcohols have been synthesised from renewable reagents through a borane-free oxidation/reduction sequence.

Bis(2-ethyl-hexyl) phthalate (DEHP) is one of the most important and widely used industrial plasticizers and is generated from 2-ethyl-1-hexanol (2EH) and phthalic anhydride.  In the process of converting bio-butanol to jet fuels, a significant amount of 2-ethyl-1-hexene is produced as a by-product, and is an attractive feedstock to generate 2EH.  To yield the required 2EH from 2-ethyl-1-hexene, an anti-Markovnikov addition is required. However, the traditional hydroboration method used to achieve this is not ideal for large scale, atom economic production of 2EH.

In this work, Benjamin Harvey and colleagues from the United States Navy-Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) demonstrate an efficient method for formal anti-Markovnikov hydration of 1,1-disubstituted alkenes.  Their approach generates the plasticizer alcohols by the oxidation/hydration/hydrogenation of branched chain alkenes under mild, borane-free conditions.  This process was successfully applied to the production of 2EH from 2-ethyl-1-hexene, and presents an alternative to hydroboration for a challenging subset of hindered olefins.

This article is free to access until the 29th August 2012!  Click on the link below to find out more…

Synthesis of renewable plasticizer alcohols by formal anti-Markovnikov hydration of terminal branched chain alkenes viaa borane-free oxidation/reduction sequence, Benjamin G. Harvey, Heather A. Meylemans and Roxanne L. Quintana, Green Chem., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35595G

You may also be interested in this article – free to access for 2 weeks:

Mechanism of efficient anti-Markovnikov olefin hydroarylation catalyzed by homogeneous Ir(III) complexes, Gaurav Bhalla, Steven M. Bischof, Somesh K. Ganesh, Xiang Yang Liu, C. J. Jones, Andrey Borzenko, William J. Tenn, III, Daniel H. Ess, Brian G. Hashiguchi, Kapil S. Lokare, Chin Hin Leung, Jonas Oxgaard, William A. Goddard, III and Roy A. Periana, Green Chem., 2011, 13, 69-81

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Cu-catalysed reductive amination of ketones with anilines using molecular hydrogen

Aromatic and aliphatic ketones reacted with aniline and molecular hydrogen in the presence of an easily available copper catalyst to give amines in high yields.

Reductive amination is one of the most important and effective C-N bond forming reactions and provides a general practical way to access amines.  The reaction commonly involves chemicals which act hydrogen donors to be present, such as silanes and formates.  However, utilizing molecular hydrogen instead would give a much more environmentally and atom-economical reducing agent, would give water as the only by-product.

Here, Matthias Beller and colleagues from the Leibniz-Institute for Catalysis in Rostock, Germany report that simple Cu(OAc)2, an inexpensive and easily available catalyst, could catalyse the reductive amination of a variety of ketones with anilines and molecular hydrogen.  The procedure does not require any complicated ligands or additional acid or base and represents the first example of a catalytic approach using copper and molecular hydrogen for reductive aminations.

This article is free to access until the 24th August 2012!  Click on the link below to find out more…

Copper-catalyzed reductive amination of aromatic and aliphatic ketones with anilines using environmental-friendly molecular hydrogen, Svenja Werkmeister, Kathrin Junge and Matthias Beller, Green Chem., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35565E

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Issue 8 of Green Chemistry now online

The latest issue of Green Chemistry is now available online!

The front cover of issue 8 features work by Matthew Fuchter and co-workers from Imperial College London and Pfizer Ltd in Sandwich.  The team developed a route to give allylic alcohols from α,β-unsaturated ketones using calcium triflate to replace cerium(III) chloride.  This procedure also accomplished the regioselective 1,2-reduction of challenging α,β-unsaturated ketones such as 2-cyclopentenone with very good selectivity, and is suitable for the stereoselective reduction of α,β-aziridinyl ketones.

Lanthanide replacement in organic synthesis: Luche-type reduction of α,β-unsaturated ketones in the presence of calcium triflate, Nina V. Forkel, David A. Henderson and Matthew J. Fuchter, Green Chem., 2012, 14, 2129-2132.

The inside front cover highlights work by Man Bock Gu and colleagues from Korea University in Seoul, who report the carbonic anhydrase-assisted formation of biomineralized calcium carbonate crystalline composites (CCCCs).  These materials were shown to be effective biocatalysts retaining 43% of the free carbonic anhydrase esterase activity.  The catalysts were stable for more than 50 days at room temperature, could be recovered easily using magnet-based separation and retained their activity over 10 repeated usages.

Carbonic anhydrase assisted calcium carbonate crystalline composites as a biocatalyst, Ee Taek Hwang, Haemin Gang, Jinyang Chung and Man Bock Gu, Green Chem., 2012, 14, 2216-2220

These articles are free to access for 6 weeks

Keep up-to-date with the latest content in Green Chemistry by registering for our free table of contents alerts!

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Top ten most accessed articles in June

This month sees the following articles in Green Chemistry that are in the top ten most accessed:-

Catalytic conversion of biomass using solvents derived from lignin
Pooya Azadi, Ronald Carrasquillo-Flores, Yomaira J. Pagán-Torres, Elif I. Gürbüz, Ramin Farnood and James A. Dumesic
Green Chem., 2012,14, 1573-1576, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35203F, Communication

An efficient copper-catalyzed formation of highly substituted pyrazoles using molecular oxygen as the oxidant
Mamta Suri, Thierry Jousseaume, Julia J. Neumann and Frank Glorius
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35476D, Paper

Multicomponent reactions in unconventional solvents: state of the art
Yanlong Gu
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35635J, Critical Review

Selective conversion of microcrystalline cellulose into hexitols on nickel particles encapsulated within ZSM-5 zeolite
Guanfeng Liang, Haiyang Cheng, Wei Li, Limin He, Yancun Yu and Fengyu Zhao
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35685F, Communication

An efficient protocol for palladium-catalyzed ligand-free Suzuki-Miyaura coupling in water
Manoj Mondal and Utpal Bora
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35401B, Communication

Evolution of asymmetric organocatalysis: multi- and retrocatalysis
Raffael C. Wende and Peter R. Schreiner
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35160A, Critical Review

TBHP/I2-promoted oxidative coupling of acetophenones with amines at room temperature under metal-free and solvent-free conditions for the synthesis of a-ketoamides
Xiaobin Zhang and Lei Wang
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35489F, Communication

Copper-catalyzed reductive amination of aromatic and aliphatic ketones with anilines using environmental-friendly molecular hydrogen
Svenja Werkmeister, Kathrin Junge and Matthias Beller
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35565E, Communication

A simple and facile Heck-type arylation of alkenes with diaryliodonium salts using magnetically recoverable Pd-catalyst
Buchi Reddy Vaddula, Amit Saha, John Leazer and Rajender S. Varma
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35673B, Communication

Efficient catalytic hydrogenation of levulinic acid: a key step in biomass conversion
József M. Tukacs, Dávid Király, Andrea Strádi, Gyula Novodarszki, Zsuzsanna Eke, Gábor Dibó, Tamás Kégl and László T. Mika
Green Chem., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C2GC35503E, Paper

Why not take a look at the articles today and blog your thoughts and comments below.

Fancy submitting an article to Green Chemistry? Then why not submit to us today or alternatively email us your suggestions.

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Incredible ionic liquids: an article collection

A collection of high quality articles on the topic of ionic liquids from RSC Advances, Catalysis Science & Technology, PCCP and Green Chemistry.

Ionic liquids are pretty self explanatory; they are ionic materials in a liquid state. In a ‘normal’ liquid, interactions are usually governed by Van de Waals or H-bonding forces. In ionic liquids it is ionic bonding interactions which dominate, meaning ionic liquids possess some interesting and unique properties.

The field of ionic liquids grew after Paul Walden’s observations of ethylammonium nitrate in 1914,1 since then the study and use of ionic liquids has grown phenomenally, with applications in analytics, biology, electrochemistry, physical chemistry, engineering, solvents and catalysis.

The academic and industrial interest in ionic liquids has thrown up some remarkable discoveries, particularly in recent years, so to keep you up to date with latest break-through research in the field we have collected these high quality articles which are free to access!*

Read more »

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