FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE聽|聽January 29, 2009
ACS Pharma Roundtable awards Yale chemist $160,000 to develop greener catalysts
WASHINGTON -- The ACS Green Chemistry Institute庐 Pharmaceutical Roundtable has awarded a $160,000 grant to Yale University chemistry professor Robert Crabtree, Ph.D. The two-year grant will support Dr. Crabtree鈥檚 efforts to develop more efficient and environmentally friendly chemical catalysts, which are required to make the drugs used by millions of people worldwide each day.
The Pharmaceutial Roundtable is a partnership between the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网鈥檚 Green Chemistry Institute庐 and global pharmaceutical corporations for the purpose of using green chemistry and engineering to make drug manufacturing safer, less costly and more environmentally benign.
鈥淭he Roundtable companies are very proud to be supporting the research of Professor Robert Crabtree,鈥� said Roundtable co-chairs Andrew Wells, Ph.D., Senior Principal Scientist, AstraZeneca Global Process R&D, and Peter Dunn, Ph.D., Pfizer Green Chemistry Lead, in a joint statement. 鈥淚ncreasing聽the efficiency of synthetic routes using improved catalytic techniques and聽avoiding potentially mutagenic alkylating agents聽are high priorities for the pharmaceutical industry, and this research project promises to extend and improve the methodology that is available to the聽chemistry community.鈥�
Dr. Crabtree鈥檚 work focuses on developing catalysts derived from iron, copper, cobalt and other metals that are cheaper, safer and simpler than traditional methods. Catalysts 鈥� which are used to speed the rate of chemical reactions or lower the energy required to make them happen 鈥� have an important role in drug production. In favorable cases, catalysts can provide high selectivity, avoiding time-consuming steps in the drug synthesis process that also produce waste. In addition, many of the substances commonly used to create classical catalysts, such as platinum, iridium and chloride, are expensive and can cause environmental problems.
鈥淭he novelty of our work is bringing together all of these features in one system and applying it to pharmaceutically important reactions,鈥� Dr. Crabtree said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the key.鈥�
One goal of the Pharmaceutical Roundtable is to develop green chemistry alternatives for these commonly used catalysts. Dr. Crabtree鈥檚 research will help propel those efforts, according to ACS Green Chemistry Institute庐 Director, Bob Peoples, Ph.D.
The Roundtable grants are awarded for research aimed at creating greener pathways to drug production that result in improved environmental benefits. This year鈥檚 grant in support of Dr. Crabtree鈥檚 research, Atom Economic Alcohol Activation and Amide Synthesis Using Base-Metal Catalysts Heterogenized on Titania Nanoparticles, will be funded through December 2010. Since the grant program began in 2007, it has provided $650,000 in funding.
Originally founded in 1997, the Green Chemistry Institute joined the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 in 2001. The Institute鈥檚 Pharmaceutical Roundtable was formed in 2005 and is a partnership between ACS and an alliance of major pharmaceutical companies. It strives to integrate green chemistry and engineering in the business of drug discovery and production. The activities of the Roundtable reflect the joint belief that the pursuit of green chemistry and green engineering is imperative for a sustainable business and world environment. Current Roundtable members include AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly & Company, Merck & Co. Inc., Pfizer Inc., Schering-Plough, Wyeth, and Boehringer-Ingelheim.
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For more information about the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 Green Chemistry Institute and the Pharmaceutical Roundtable, visit .
For further information, please contact:
Julie Manley
815-325-4974
Marvin Coyner
202-872-4493