RSC Desktop Seminars with Brazilian Chemical Society Organic Chemistry Division (17 Sept)

17 September 2020 11:30-13:00, Brazil


Introduction
RSC Desktop Seminars in Organic Chemistry with the Brazilian Chemical Society 2020 are an initiative from the Royal Society of Chemistry and the Brazilian Chemical Society to bring cutting-edge research directly to you!
 
Covid-19 has exposed us to a new reality where the virtual world is much more important than before. In order to keep our students engaged at the frontiers of Organic Chemistry, we have organized a weekly webinar series that is a joint collaboration between the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) and the Organic Chemistry Division of the Brazilian Chemical Society (SBQ). It is an alternative way to share work and interact with potential collaborators.
 
The sections will alternate between Brazilian and international speakers, in some cases with the opportunity for a selected Brazilian early career researcher to engage with the audience by presenting their recent independent career developments.

Programme

11:30 Introductions and welcome
11:35 Early Career presentation with Q&A
11:55 Main Speaker with Q&A
12:55 Closing remarks
13:00 Close

Speakers

Prof. Dr. Liane M. Rossi
Update on selective hydrogenations catalyzed by gold

The cooperative action of ligands on heterogeneous catalysts leading to the activation of small molecules, such as the H2 heterolytic splitting across the Au–ligand interface, has expanded the range of transformations achieved in gold catalysis. Nitrogen-containing ligands adsorbed on gold surface are able to promote a favorable interface to activate H2 heterolytically, which was understood as a frustrated Lewis pair (FLP) surface, improving gold’s activity. The need of a large excess of amine (100:1 ligand:Au) encouraged us to look for other family of ligands that bind strongly but do not poison the gold surface. We recently found that phosphorous-containing ligands were also able to boost the catalytic activity of Au NPs for a range of important reduction reactions. Due to intrinsic properties of gold, C-C double bonds were preserved while other functional groups are reduced. In this talk we will discuss the generality of cooperative catalysis using gold-ligand systems under study in our research group for selective hydrogenations using H2 and also for transfer hydrogenation reactions.

Prof Dr Marcelo Oliveira Rodrigues 
Nanotechnology and Sustainable Agriculture: Challenges and Solutions

Agriculture is historically the most stable and important sector which along of the several centuries has been responsible to provide raw materials for food and feed industries. With the Green Revolution of 1960, the global food supply has been hugely enhanced, because agriculture was benefited by a diversity of technological innovations introduced by the biotechnology and chemical sectors.  However, the high dependence of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers post Green Revolution have been accompanied by a detrimental impact on ecosystem and public health. Nowadays, almost the half of crop production arise from 16% of irrigated agricultural fields, nevertheless, this typical practice can contribute to turn soils acids, accelerate the rate of leach out of soil minerals, or caused salt build-ups.  All these factors will result in an eventual abandon of those fields due to the rapid soil degradation. It is unquestionable that the development of a sustainable agriculture is completely dependent of innovations in techniques and procedures, in fact, this can be considered as one of the most important paradigms to be overcome by the current generation, since, hunger and degraded ecosystem have become a severe threat to human health and the civilization. In this context, nanotechnology emerges as a potential solution to overmatch the conventional agriculture drawbacks, since it would be still able to enhance the productivity concomitant to the reducing of the environmental impact. Despite of evident potentialities, nanotechnology in agriculture applications are still marginal in comparison with other industrial sectors. The crescent number of publications and patents related to this theme still represent less than 5% of the kindred field of energy and materials and 1.5% that of nanomedicine. In this presentation will be presented the potentialities of some nanomaterials in agriculture and these sophisticated materials can contribute for a sustainable food production. 
 
Speakers
Prof. Dr. Liane M. Rossi, University of São Paulo, Brazil

BS degree in Chemical Engineering from the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (1994). PhD in Chemistry from the Federal University of Santa Catarina (2001). Postdoctoral researcher at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil) and at the University of New Orleans (USA). In 2004, she joined the Institute of Chemistry at the University of São Paulo (IQUSP) and become Associate Professor (2010) and Full Professor since 2016. Her research interests in the field of chemistry and catalysis include novel approaches for the synthesis of supported metal nanoparticles with controlled size, morphology and surface properties, catalyst recovery and recycling, new reactivity patterns at metal-ligands interfaces, bimetallic and hybrid catalysts, and the concepts of green chemistry for selective transformations. The main catalytic processes under study are selective hydrogenations and oxidations, biomass conversion into chemicals, including CO2 capture and conversion. She is the Coordinator of the scientific project “Innovative process for CO2 conversion to high added value chemicals and fuels based on hybrid catalysts” at the Research Centre for Gas Innovation (RCGI), sponsored by FAPESP- SHELL. She is the author or co-author of more than 110 papers published in indexed peer-reviewed scientific journals, two book chapters and two patent applications filled. She is an Editorial Advisory Board Member at ACS Catalysis (American Chemical Society) and Chemistry Select (ChemPubSoc and Wiley). She is a member of the Brazilian Chemical Society (SBQ), Brazilian Catalysis Society (SBCAT) and American Chemical Society (ACS). She holds a CNPq’s fellowship Level 1B.


Prof Dr Marcelo Oliveira Rodrigues , University of Brasilia-UnB, Brazil

I am a senior lecturer of Inorganic Chemistry at Universidade de Brasília. Currently, my research group comprises 08 Ph.D., 02 M.Sc. and 12 undergraduate students. Already, 03 Ph.D., 07 M.Sc. and several undergraduate students have successfully developed research projects under my supervision. My independent career began in 2011. Until then, I had published 12 articles and. After that, I published more than 30 articles (all indexed at ISI and Scopus), and only a few as a collaborator underpinning my research independence. I have patents on photoluminescent materials for applications in forensic science, bioimaging, agriculture and nanomedicine. I am the co-founder of the spin-off company called Krilltech Sustainable Solutions which was created based on technologies developed in cooperation with the Brazilian Agriculture Research Corporation (EMBRAPA).



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Go To Webinar, Brazil

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