Prof. Todd Emrick - Portland Local Section
Transcription
Prof. Todd Emrick - Portland Local Section
Please Post ® The P May 2015 RTLAND Section Newsletter CELEBRATING 54 YEARS Vol. 54, Number 5 Prof. Todd Emrick Director, National Science Foundation Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) on Polymers at UMass Amherst presents a talk entitled Advancing polymer chemistry at interfaces and in interlayers using Nature’s functionality Thursday, May 14, 2015 Reed College Vollum Lounge 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd, Portland, OR 97202 Reed College Campus Map (Vollum Campus Center is No. 38 on the Reed College Map) Schedule: 6:00 PM social—6:45 PM buffet dinner— 7:30 PM presentation of 50-60 year service awards—7:45 PM talk For dinner reservations call the Section phone 503 230 9803 by Monday evening May 11 and leave your name (spell out name), phone number, number of persons and meal preference (meat or vegan entrée) or use the online form. If you make a meal reservation and do not attend please send payment ($20) to Bernard Carlsen, 17463 Shalit Way, Lake Oswego OR 97035-5435. Portland Section website: http://portland-or.sites.acs.org Abstract: “Advancing polymer chemistry at interfaces and in interlayers using Nature’s functionality”. Todd Emrick Director, National Science Foundation Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) on Polymers at UMass Amherst. Nature provides a breadth of functionality for integration into synthetic polymers, including amino acids, oligonucleotides and peptides, and any of a variety of natural products. This lecture will examine the role of zwitterions in synthetic polymers, in which the strong dipoles and generally hydrophilc properties of zwitterions offer new possibilities in polymer synthesis and new emerging applications. Two specific topics in this lecture include: 1) attachment of sulfobetaine zwitterions to conjugated polymers as a route to cathode modification layers and high efficiency polymer-based solar cells; and 2) attachment of phosphorylcholine zwitterions to synthetic polymers (such as methacrylates, polyolefins, and polyesters) that enable new, effective routes in aqueous-based formulations (i.e., cancer drug delivery) and fundamental interfacial phenomena (such as emulsion stabilization and particulate transport). Chemical Society and ACS-PMSE, and in 2014 was inducted into the National Academy of Inventors (NAI). Recognition of members having served 50 or 60 years of continuous Society Membership At the May 14 meeting the Section will recognize three sixty-year members: Arleigh Dodson Tom Dunne Don Gilbert The Section will recognize eleven fifty-year members: Fritz Kokesh Larry Bone Harold Nelson Jim Currie Walter Partenheimer Andrew Held Robert Rieck Roger Heusser Carl Wamser Donald Jacobsen Lawrence Jacoby Portland Section Silver Chemists Meeting Monday, May 4, 2015 The Scientific Career of Henry Taube, presentation by Jim Hurst with contribution from Tom Dunne Gustav’s German Restaurant 5035 NE Sandy Blvd, Portland, OR 97213 Lunch at 12:00, program at 1:00. Reservations for lunch and program required by May 1: email [email protected] Jim Hurst is semi-retired after a career as Professor at the Oregon Graduate Center and at Washington State University. Tom Dunne is Professor Emeritus from Reed College. Both Jim and Tom worked in the Taube lab as young chemists. Bio: Todd Emrick completed his undergraduate degree in Chemistry at Juniata College in 1992, where he was introduced to organic synthesis research by Professor I. David Reingold. Todd’s Ph.D. is from the University of Chicago, where he studied carbon-carbon bond forming reactions that afford dimers and higher oligomers of the caged hydrocarbon cubane. Following postdoctoral work at U California Berkeley with Jean Frechet, he started his independent career in 2001 in the Polymer Science and Engineering Department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Todd was tenured in 2007 and promoted to Full Professor in 2011. His research interests span a breadth of organic/polymer/nanomaterials synthesis and assembly, with interests in new monomer design, polymerization chemistry, interfacial chemistry and emulsion stabilization, aqueous polymer assembly and polymer therapeutics, and polymer thin films for enhancing transport properties. Todd has published over 200 peer-reviewed manuscripts and is the inventor on 15 issued patents. He is Director of the UMass Amherst Materials Research Science and Engineering Center on Polymers, an NSF-funded Center, and additionally works on projects supported by DOE, NIH, DOD, and the FAA. Todd has received the NSF CAREER Award, the Doolittle Award from the PMSE Division of the American Chemical Society, and the Carl S. Marvel Award for Creative Polymer Chemistry. Todd is a Fellow of the American Portland Section Prepares to move from mailed printed meeting notices to email meeting notice As of March 2015, 94% of Portland Section members show valid email addresses in eroster, which is the monthly database of member information that the Society provides to Local Sections. The Portland Local Section Executive Committee proposes to discontinue mailed meeting notices as a cost-saving measure. Members who have opted out of email or who have no email address in eroster will not be affected and need do nothing; those members will continue to receive mailed meeting notices for ACS events. To meet the needs of all members, however, the mailed notice for the May 14, 2015 meeting provides members the option to continue to receive printed mailed meeting notices for future meetings of the Portland Section ACS. Follow instructions to return the postcard. 2