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Event

Public lecture: Nobel Laureate Akira Suzuki

Tuesday, March 18, 2014 13:00
Maass Chemistry Building Room 10, 801 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 0B8, CA
Akira Suzuki

Cross-Coupling Reactions of Organoboranes: An Easy Way for Carbon-Carbon Bonding

Nobel Laureate Akira Suzuki, Professor Emeritus, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

Everyone is welcome

Carbon-carbon bond-formation reactions are important processes in chemistry, because they provide key steps in the building of complex organic molecules. They are also vital in developing the new generation of ingeniously designed organic materials with novel electronic, optical, or mechanical properties. During the past 40 years, most important carbon-carbon bond-forming methodologies have involved using transition metals to mediate the reactions in a controlled and selective manner. The palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction between different types of organoboron compounds and various organic halides or triflates in the presence of base provides a powerful and general methodology for the formation of carbon-carbon bonds. The (sp3)C-B compounds (alkylboron compounds) and (sp2)C-B compounds (such as aryl- and 1-alkenylboron derivatives) readily cross-couple with organic electrophiles to give coupled products selectively in high yields. Recently, the (sp)C-B compounds (1-alkynylboron derivatives) have been also observed to react with organic electrophiles to produce expected cross-coupled products. Such coupling reactions offer several advantages.

These coupling reactions have been actively utilized not only in academic laboratories but also in industrial processes including pharmaceutical and agrochemical industries, and liquid crystal and OELD production in industry. In this lecture, the overview of the coupling reaction will be discussed.

Prof. Suzuki received his PhD degree in 1960 at Hokkaido University and immediately after that he was appointed Associate Professor at Hokkaido University. In 1963 he joined the group of H.C. Brown at Purdue University as a Postdoctoral Fellow. In 1973 he was promoted to full Professor at Hokkaido University, where he is currently Emeritus Professor. Prof. Suzuki’s work on cross-coupling reactions of organic boron compounds in the presence of palladium as a catalyst had a profound impact on a wide range of research. Catalytic chemistry, material sciences, and organic synthetic chemistry are fields that were also affected, and the cross-coupling has become globally recognized as the “Suzuki coupling reaction.” In recognition of his outstanding contributions to Chemistry, Prof. Suzuki has received numerous awards including the 2010 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

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