ORCID Identifier(s)

0000-0002-0728-6190

Graduation Semester and Year

2020

Language

English

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy in Chemistry

Department

Chemistry and Biochemistry

First Advisor

Junha Jeon

Abstract

The research described in this dissertation is on three different projects namely i) design and synthesis of traceless hydrosilyl acetal-directed, exo-syn hydrosilylation of propargyl alcohols to produce α-hydroxy (E)-vinylsilanes, ii) alkali metal lewis base-catalyzed, complexation-induced hydrogen atom transfer (LBCI-HAT) olefin polymerization and iii) on-chip organic synthesis enabled by engine-and-cargo on an electrowetting-on-dielectric digital microfluidic (EWOD) device. The first chapter is focused on the design and synthesis of traceless hydrosilyl acetal-directed, exo-syn hydrosilylation of propargyl alcohols to produce α-hydroxy (E)-vinylsilanes. Transition metal-catalyzed regioselective intramolecular hydrosilylation of propargylic alcohols utilizing easily accessible, inexpensive, and readily installable hydrosilyl acetals as a directing group to achieve high reactivity and high regioselectivity has been developed.In second chapter, focus is on alkali metal Lewis base-catalyzed, complexation-induced hydrogen atom transfer (LBCI-HAT) olefin polymerization. This strategy introduces transition metal-free, LBCI-HAT olefin polymerization process to the field of the production of large polymeric architectures. The approach is operationally simple, practical, and its sustainable nature of the (controlled) LBCI-HAT polymerization proceeds rapidly under aerobic conditions and at room temperature.In third chapter, focus is on on-chip organic synthesis using an electrowetting-on-dielectric (EWOD) digital microfluidic device. Despite of number of chemical/biological applications using EWOD digital microfluidic device, its application to organic reactions is limited. The major limitation is associated with the typical solvents used for synthetic organic chemistry that are not operable on EWOD device. In order to address this limitation a novel technique of an “engine-and-cargo” system is utilized that enables use of non-movable fluid (e.g., organic solvents) on an EWOD device.In addition to this, research is also carried out for in-line organic workup as a key move towards development of multi-step synthesis on an EWOD platform. Acid-base workup is chosen as a model system to demonstrate the compatibility of general organic workup procedure and was successfully demonstrated.

Keywords

Propargyl alcohols, Hydrosilylation, Lewis base-catalyzed, complexation-induced hydrogen atom transfer, olefin polymerization, electrowetting-on-dielectric, engine-and-cargo, in-line organic workup

Disciplines

Chemistry | Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Comments

Degree granted by The University of Texas at Arlington

30873-2.pdf (2731 kB)
30873-3.zip (34829 kB)

Included in

Chemistry Commons

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