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  Photochemical synthesis of new drug-like scaffolds


   School of Chemistry & Food

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  Dr C Smith, Dr A T Russell  Applications accepted all year round  Self-Funded PhD Students Only

About the Project

"Our laboratory is interested in the application of enabling technologies, such as continuous flow[1] and photochemistry,[2] for the synthesis of useful functional molecules such as drugs, agrochemicals and materials. Advantageously, these continuous-flow photoreactors are easier to use and control than their batch-wise predecessors. Photochemical reactions behave in an orthogonal manner from thermally-allowed reactions and offer a unique route to unusual scaffolds. The construction of these unusual scaffolds is of interest to commercial drug-discovery programmes as they have not be tested on drug targets and offer new opportunities to target diseases. During this project we will develop novel photochemical strategies towards new biologically-interesting molecules with a view to synthesizing small libraries for further testing.

In addition to the flow-photochemical equipment the Department of Chemistry possess state-of-the-art equipment for the characterization of these compounds through the Chemical Analysis Facility (CAF www.reading.ac.uk/caf) including: NMR up to 700 MHz; molecular spectroscopy (Raman, UV/Vis, IR and fluorescence); gas- and liquid-chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS and LC-MS); single-crystal and powder X-ray analysis; thermal analysis (TGA); and electron microscopy.

This project will involve training in flow chemistry and organic synthesis and as such will allow you to develop excellent practical and theoretical skills in synthetic chemistry. "


References

"[1] J. S. Moore, C. D. Smith, and K. F. Jensen, React. Chem. Eng., 2016, 1, 272–279.
[2] D. Chappell, M. G. B. Drew, S. Gibson, L. M. Harwood, and A. T. Russell, Synlett, 2010, 517-520."

Where will I study?

 About the Project