210TH AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY NATIONAL MEETING

At the national meeting in Chicago, 29 of the society's technical divisions, three committees, one committee task force, and one secretariat will part...
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210TH AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY NATIONAL MEETING August 20-24, 1995 ·

Chicago

PRELIMINARY

PROGRAM

Chicago '210TH ACS NATIONAL MEETING

August 20-24, 1995 A t the national meeting in ChicaΖ Λ go, 29 of the society's technical J L T J L divisions, three committees, one committee task force, and one secretar­ iat will participate in nearly 500 techni­ cal sessions. More than 4,000 papers will be presented. Theme programming, long a goal of ACS meetings, has a new face at the meeting. Under this program coordina­ tion effort, topics that are pertinent either to current issues or to the meeting loca­ tion are selected, and prograniming that falls within the identified themes are featured. At this year's Program Coordi­ nation Conference, two themes were se­ lected for the Chicago meeting: quality standards and biotechnology for bioremediation. In the technical program summary that starts on the facing page, a bold Β denotes those symposia or poster sessions that are considered to be within the biotechnology for bioremediation theme; a bold Q marks those with­ in the quality standards theme. Sugges­ tions for themes for future meetings are welcome; address correspondence to the chairman of the Committee on Meetings & Expositions. In addition, the chemical industry will be the focus of several events. Among them, the presidential plenary event, "Industries Create Inventions: From the Lab to Your Home/' will begin late Sun­ day afternoon. This visual tour of how ideas are developed, processed, and packaged includes equipment, products, and displays as well as explanatory text and illustrations. In a Division of Poly­ mer Chemistry symposium, the indus­ trial innovation process will be viewed from the polymer perspective in 12 pre­ sentations—technical case studies—from 44

JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

major U.S. polymerrelated industries. The many other symposia and events that make up the meet­ ing cover a range of topics as diverse as the society's member­ ship: "smart" materi­ als, which have pro­ grammed responses to specific conditions (Materials Chemistry Secretariat); liquid in­ terfacial structure (Col­ loid & Surface Chem­ istry); using the Internet (Computers in Chemistry); and uses of synchrotron ra­ diation (Nuclear Chemistry). Programming for this meeting be­ gins on Sunday, Aug. 20, and continues through Thursday, Aug. 24; no sessions or events are scheduled on Friday. The quality standards theme carries over to the ACS exposition, where "Quality Row" will house the exhibits

of the National Institute of Standards & Technology, the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award program, Un­ derwriters Laboratories, American Na­ tional Standards Institute, International Approval Services, ABS Quality Evalu­ ations, and NSL International. Other exhibiting companies that have earned certification will be identified in the exposition.

Technical Program Summary

45

Workshops

71

General Program

64

Exposition

73

Registration

64

Tours

74

Housing

65

Employment Services

75

Travel

65

Committee Agenda

77

Local Arrangements

65

Short Courses

82

Special Events

69

ACS Officers

83

Social Events .,

70

Preprints

83

Technical Program Summary PLEN Presidential Plenary Β. Μ. Rushton, ACS President ]

Fairmont

S M

Industries create inventions

Ε

HIGHLIGHTS:

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T\W

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scientist lecture. He will conduct an informal discussion with students over lunch before presenting his lecture. The undergraduate research and successful student affiliates chapter activities poster session (spon­ sored by CHED) will present more than 100 posters. Technical sympo­ sia will cover forensic chemistry and faculty teaching/student learning styles. Workshops will involve the following topics: hands-on science activities for elementary students, graduate school preparation, analyt­ ical chemistry career applications (sponsored by Procter & Gamble), student affiliates problem-solving and leadership development, and how to jump-start your career. An undergraduate kick-off social (spon­ sored by the Chicago State University NOBCChE chapter) for students and mentors will be held on Saturday evening. An undergraduate hos­ pitality center will be open Sunday through Tuesday.

! !

See box on page 70 for details.

YCC COMSCI Younger Chemists Committee E. Hernandez, E. Fisher, Program Chairmen

Committee on Science

S .M' T I W T

McCormick Place North

Ε. Μ. Pearce, Program Chairman

Campus/site visit: a survival guide*

Sheraton

S M Τ W Τ

Chemistry & the national agenda

A

:

Tenure & tots: balancing career & parenting*' Q—Quality in the chemical industry*

HIGHLIGHTS: For the second time, the committee will feature a symposium on chemistry and the national agenda: future employment opportunities in the chemical sciences. This symposium will feature a panel of speakers representing academia, industry, government, and public policy and social welfare organizations. Their discussions will fo­ cus on new developments in science and technology and how they will affect the related job markets. The professional qualifications required to meet the needs of employers in the future will also be addressed.

SOCED

Α,

1

; Α

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,

.

Ρ

HIGHLIGHTS: An educational symposium—quality in the chemi­ cal industry: what you need to know—will highlight key areas of qual­ ity standards and tools not routinely taught in school but that any as­ piring industrial chemist should know. This symposium will also ex­ plain why industry and the federal government are investing millions of dollars in quality programs. General quality concepts, international standards, and real-world applications will be covered. The campus/ site visit will be an interactive session where a panel of past visitors and present hosts will discuss what is expected and what to expect in the first visit to a new campus or industrial site. A symposium on ten­ ure and tots: balancing an academic career and parenting will give participants the opportunity to meet academicians who are also coping with parenting in the '90s. Discussion of issues specifically pertaining to balancing the stresses of an academic career with family will also take place.

Society Committee on Education M. Hankins, Program Chairman McCormick Place North

S M Τ W Τ

Campus /site visit: a survival guide* (YCC)

A

Undergrads on forensic chemistry

A

Eminent scientist lecture for undergrads

Ρ

Student survival guide: learning chemistry* *

A

HIGHLIGHTS: A major feature of the undergraduate program will be the fourth annual Graduate School Fair with more than 70 exhibi­ tors. ACS Corporation Associates will cosponsor a careers in industry panel discussion focusing on co-op and internship opportunities. A special reception will follow for undergraduates, and undergraduate students can interact with chemistry professionals. James R. Norris of Argonne National Lab will be featured in the undergraduates' eminent

*Cosponsored symposium, primary organizer(s) shown in parentheses. **Primary organizer, cosponsored symposium. A = AM P = PM D = AM/PM Ε = EVE DE = AM/PM/EVE PE = PM/EVE Β—Biotechnology for Bioremediation theme programming Q—Quality Standards theme programming

JUNE 19,1995 C&EN 45

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM in another symposium. A symposium on wine chemistry will focus on recent developments in the beneficial health properties of wine. Con­ tribution of low and nonvolatile materials such as salt, fats, and sweet­ eners to the flavor of foods will be discussed in a symposium. A sym­ posium on the quality of processed and stored foods will emphasize the identification, detection, and measurement of marker compounds for their quality quantification. The general session on Sunday will fea­ ture a presentation by Young Scientist Award winner Thomas G. Hartman on the applications of mass spectrometry to characterizing food components. The division award banquet will honor Owen R. Ferme­ nta on Tuesday evening.

LWM ACS Task Force on Laboratory Waste Management P. G Ashbrook, Program Chairman S M Τ W Τ

McCormick Place East

Ρ

Q—Poster session: inventory systems for chemicals**

HIGHLIGHTS: A poster session on inventory systems for labora­ tory chemicals will be held. Presentations will be made by users and vendors of small and large working chemical inventory systems. Pre­ senters will discuss the motivations for preparing inventories and the successes and difficulties encountered.

AGRO Division of Agrochemicals B. Cross, Program

MTLS Materials Chemistry Secretariat T. Vigo, Program Chairman McCormick

Place

North

S M Τ W Τ D

Polymeric smart materials**

D

Intelligent materials for chemical sensing**

Chairman

Sheraton

S M Τ W Τ

Residue analysis

D

Natural products in agricultural pest control

D A

Resistance & management of agrochemicals

D

Sci-Mix

Ε

Fumigants: environmental behavior & analysis

D D

Synthesis & chemistry of agrochemicals

Ρ

General session/Sterling Hendricks award lecture

A D

Poster session

Ρ

HIGHLIGHTS: The program will feature a full-range symposium on the use of fumigants in agriculture-associated regulatory issues, en­ vironmental behavior, exposure, and analysis. On Monday, Koji Nakanishi will receive the DuPont-sponsored International Award for Re­ search in Agrochemicals. A symposium on natural products as leads for agricultural products will be presented in his honor. Herbicide re­ sistance will be the subject of a one-day symposia. A strong program of contributed papers will be included in the ongoing symposia on the synthesis of agrochemicals, residue analysis, and general papers and posters. The Sterling Hendricks award lecture will be featured.

AGFD Division of Agricultural & Food Chemistry G T. Ho, Program Chairman Sheraton

S M Τ W Τ

General session in honor of T. G. Hartman

A

Β—Saponins: chemistry & biological activity

D D D Ρ D

Wine composition & health benefits

D D

Q—Chemical markers for foods

Ρ D A

Poster session: general

Ρ

Sci-Mix

Ε

Division of Analytical Chemistry

John E. Kinsella memorial symposium

D D

Low & nonvolatile materials & foods

Ρ D

Poster session: saponins Antinutrients & phytochemicals in foods

ANYL

A D

E. Yeung, Program

Chairman

McCormick

East

Place

Frontiers in electrochemistry

D

Capillary electrophoresis

D Ρ

Poster session: general (Sheraton)

Ε

Awards symposium HIGHLIGHTS: A symposium on food proteins and lipids will be dedicated to the memory of John F. Kinsella. Chemistry, biological ac­ tivity, and commercial applications of saponins will be presented in a five-day symposium. Various antinutrients in foods will be discussed 46

JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

S M Τ W Τ

A

Frontiers in analytical education

A

Frontiers in spectrochemical analysis

Ρ

McCormick

Place East

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Frnntiprs in rhprniral instrumpntatinn

D

Analytical mass spectrometry instrumentation

D

HIGHLIGHTS: Four Division of Analytical Chemistry awardees will be honored: Theodore Kuwana (electrochemistry), Michael Morris (spectrochemical analysis), James Winefordner (excellence in teaching), and Richard Zare (chemical instrumentation). An awards session will feature the award addresses. In addition, separate "frontiers'' sympo­ sia will be held in each area to honor these scientists. Other symposia will focus on capillary electrophoresis and analytical mass spectrome­ try instrumentation. A poster session and mixer on Sunday evening will feature general papers.

McCormick

Place

S M Τ W Τ

North

General session

Ρ

Poster session/social hour

Ρ

Pre-high school chemistry

Ρ A

Q—K-12 standards & university chemistry teaching

D

Classroom teacher as researcher

D

High school program (Roosevelt

University)

D

Careers in chemical information* (CINF)

Ρ

Poster session: undergrad research

Ρ

Sci-Mix

Ε

Student survival guide: learning chemistry* (SOCED)

A

Using hypermedia in the classroom

A A

NSF-catalyzed innovations in the undergrad lab

D

Forensic science

D A

Business Development & Management Division

Q—Poster session: inventory* (CHAS, CINF, LWM)

Ρ

jR. F. Stockel, Program Chairman

Computers as classroom partners

Ρ Ρ

BMGT

McCormick Place North

S M Γ W Τ D D

Coatings & adhesives industry

CARB Division of Carbohydrate Chemistry A. D. French, Program Chairman S M Τ W Τ

McCormick Place East

D

Advances in carbohydrate chemistry

HIGHLIGHTS: The program will consist of a combined oral and poster session on recent advances in carbohydrate chemistry, followed by the divisional business meeting. Contributions from the University of Minnesota will be prominent, with others from Russia and Egypt.

Teaching without a textbook

D

Chemistry labs for the non-science major

Ρ

What must be in general chemistry

A

General session: laboratory

A

General session: computers

Ρ

General session: organic & biochemistry

Ρ

HIGHLIGHTS: A three-session series on teaching environmental chemistry will address issues of preserving and cleaning up the envi­ ronment as well as analysis and teaching methods. Presenters at a three-session series on forensic medicine will use mock trials, comput­ ers, and forensics to demonstrate applied chemistry. Four sessions will cover computer use in chemistry, including hypermedia and other ways of using computers as lecture partners. The high school program will feature new classroom materials and chemistry misconceptions. In addition, Irwin Talesnick will perform gas laws demonstrations. Dur­ ing other sessions, high school teachers who participated in a team ac­ tion research project will report on their research plan and its outcome, and methods to reach and teach pre-high school students will be pre­ sented. General papers will be given, and a poster session and recep­ tion will be held.

CHED Division of Chemical Education Inc. A. M. Wilson, Program Chairman McCormick Place North

S M Τ W Τ

Chemistry for health professionals

A

General session: teaching methods

A

Q—Teaching environmental chemistry**

D Ρ

*Cosponsored symposium, primary organizer(s) shown in parentheses. "Primary organizer, cosponsored symposium. A = AMP = PMD = AM/PM Ε = EVE DE = AM/PM/EVE PE = PM/EVE B—-Biotechnology for Bioremediation theme programming Q—Quality Standards theme programming

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JUNE 19,1995 C&EN 47

It's a chemists best friend. Ask the very enthusiastic Ben SaJlard why he and his fellow chemists in Process Tfech use Power Macintosh™ and you'll get more reasons than can fit in one ad. A lot more. Because they don't just use the RISC-based Power Macintosh to explore the intricacies of new chemical compounds. They also use it to collaborate with microbiologists, environmentalists, analysts and economists-in short, the different "ists" all around the world who help Sandoz Agro develop and market new products. They use Power Mac™toconnecttothe Internet, where they can share select findings with the scientific community at large. (And make sure other findings haven't yet been found.) They even use Power Macintosh to save money. Like the time they went off and optimized a deprotonization on a Mac™ instead of building a pilot plant. And saved $30 million. That made the whole group look good. And bred a new kind of loyalty between Ben and his Mac. The kind usually reserved for someone named Spot.

"If all vou want to do is data acquisition, sure, you can do it on a Windows PC. But if vou want to connect to

Process Tech scientists at Sandoz Agro are charged with finding the fastest, easiest and most cost-efficient ways to produce everything from herbicides and fungicides to flea control products for the family pet. Their latest finding? "Power Mac has the power we need to stay competitive." Sandoz Agro chemists use LabVIEW and Power Mac to control and analyze complex chemical reactions from their desktops while they continue with other work. And that's just one example of the hundreds of powerful scientific, engineering and design applications that have been opti­ mized for the RISC-based PowerPC " chip at the heart of Power Macintosh.

a Novell server and a VAX and an AS/400, and vou

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Every Power Mac can read, write and format disks for DOS, Windows and OS/2. And every Power Mac lets you open and work with DOS and Windows files. If you need more compatibility than that, the Power Macintosh 6100/66 DOS Compatible includes both a 66 MHz 486DX2 and a PowerPC 601 microprocessor in one PC.

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want to run business apps,

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Macintosh" has always been known for graphi­ cal aptitude. But what kind of graphic is this? It's the Frontier" molecule, as visualized by a Sandoz Agro chemist with Chem3D Plus. And that's just the start. With Power Macintosh and Apple" innovations like QuickDraw" 3D and QuickTime' VR, 3-D visualization and virtual reality become as easy as. well, using a Mac.

and you need to do it now, then vou need a Power Mac. Get to know Power Macintosh. To learn how Power Macintosh can fit into your scientific, engi­ neering or design environment, call 800-487-6809 to receive free information by fax.

Anvone who thinks there Benjamin W. Sallard, Jr. Chemist Network Administrator Process Technology Group Sandoz Agro, Inc. Des Plaines. Illinois As part of a multinational life sciences company with more than 1.200 employees in the U.S. and Canada. Sandoz Agro specializes in the development and manu­ facture of environmentally sensitive biological, biochemical and chemical pest control products.

Or, if you prefer, give us a call at 800-554-3848 and ask for ext. 550 to receive your free Power Macintosh Solutions Kit by mail.

is a faster or easier way to

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I

accomplish all that is, well,

PowerMacintosh. The business Macintosh.

barking up the wrong tree."

Appleu © 1995 .Ippie Computer. Inc Mlri)>btsresert vd ,\f>ple the Afiple Ιοχο Macintosh ami QuickTime an registeredtrademarks oj.ipple Computer. Inc Mac. lOuer Mac. f'ouvr Macintosh andQuiciDniu are trademarks of.ipple Computer. Inc Pourrit' a a tnulenuirk of hitematumid liusiness Machines Corporation, used under license therefrom All .ipple products are designed to he accessible to tnthnduaL· uitb diuibtlity Tf> learn more II \ only), call SOO"(, 2{{i or TDD so() SU 6_'.'J

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM

TECH

CHAS Division of Chemical Health & Safety

Division of Chemical Technicians

G. H. Wahl Jr., Program Chairman

M. F. Carrier, Program

McCormick

Place

!

S M

East

Q—Future of regulations & impact on research

τ

Ρ

Place

S M Τ W Τ

North

Ρ

Q—Quality in the chemical industry* (I&EC, YCC) D

Q—Strategies for risk management plans

McCormick

Chairman

:

!

Student lab safety programs

A|

Q—Prudent practices 1995

P

Q—Poster session: inventory* (LWM, CINF, CHED)

p|

Operating instructions for the witness chair

!

Q—Quality management systems in the lab*

A '

Fossil fuels & biomass/general chemistry

Ρ

HlGHLIGHl. S: The program will include symposia on quality man­ agement systems in the laboratory and on general chemistry, followed by a general chemistry poster symposium. A workshop will be held on Monday entitled Planning Effective Experiments: Getting the Most Out of Your Experimentation. See description on page 71.

ID

CINF

CHAL

Division of Chemical Information

Division of Chemistry & The Law Inc.

G. Grethe, Program Chairman

A. O. Robertson, Program Chairman

Sheraton

S M Τ W Τ

McCormick

Collaborative electronic notebooks**

D

Licensing & technology transfer

A :

Symposium in honor of G. Vander Stouw

Ρ

Special topics in chemistry & the law

p I I



Place

East

Use of chemical info for new compounds

A

Protection of intellectual property

Polymer information management

A

Protection of intellectual property/mock trial

Careers in chemical information**

Ρ

Sci-Mix

Sci-Mix

Ε

Skolnik award symposium

D

Q—Poster session: inventory* (CHAS, LWM, CHED)

Ρ

Challenges of large databases**

D

Collaboratory: laboratory without walls* (COMP)

Ρ

Information sources for inorganic chemistry

A

General session

Ρ

HIGHLIGHTS: The Skolnik award symposium honoring Clemens Jochum and Reiner Luckenbach will highlight the program. Experts from industry and academe will discuss the many aspects of chemical information, including structures, properties, reactions, and beyond. In a special symposium, friends and coworkers will pay tribute to the late Gerald Vander Stouw and discuss their work in the information field. The challenges presented by large databases ranging form fast search technologies to the handling of generic structures from patents or com­ binatorial libraries will be discussed in a daylong symposium. Other sessions will include a continued discussion on collaborative electron­ ic notebooks and symposia on the information needs of inorganic and polymer chemists. Careers in chemical information will be the topic of a special session directed toward younger chemists.

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HIGH LAG ti'i'b; Protection and utilization of intellectual property will be the focus of several symposia and a mock trial. Aspects of licensing and technology transfer where involved parties may be com­ panies, government agencies, or universities will be explored. A sym­ posium on the basics of patent procurement will include a mock trial of a patent litigation, and another will cover the responsibilities of var­ ious government agencies that deal with matters related to chemical health and safety. Additionally, a session of mixed topics at the inter­ face of chemistry and law will include a talk on steps for dealing with environmental disaster.

"Cosponsored symposium, primary organizer(s) shown in parentheses **Primary organizer, cosponsored symposium. A = AM P = PM D = AM/PM Ε = EVE DE = AM/PM/EVE PE = PM/EVE 2*—Biotechnology for Bioremediation theme programming Q—Quality Standards theme programming

50 JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

|

Τ

Hyatt

COLL

Regency

\s \M\T

Computation in NMR spectroscopy

IP D

Chemistry on the infobahn |

S M Τ W Τ

Foams, emulsions & thin liquid films

D

Interfacial structure

D D D D D

Catalysis & photocatalysis on metal oxides

D A D D

Electrochemical surface science**

D D D D

Sci-Mix

Ε

|

New parameters in molecular orbital theory

j

Poster session

|

Pharmacophore mapping databases* (MEDI)

j

Collaborator^: laboratory without walls**

Langmuir lectures

Ρ

Poster session (Sheraton)

Ε

HIGHLIGHTS: Five symposia and the Langmuir lectures will be fea­ tured. Ln addition, the division will sponsor a symposium on thin-film chemical sensors as part of the symposium on intelligent materials and structures in the materials science secretariat. The symposium on foams, emulsions, and thin liquid films will highlight foam and emulsion stabil­ ity, coalescence rate processes, thin liquid films, interfacial rheology prop­ erties, and foam inhibition and control. The continuing symposia on sur­ factants and association colloids will examine all of the key areas of liq­ uid interfacial structure. This comprehensive five-day symposium will address amphiphiles at liquid-liquid interfaces; the structure of vesicles, bilayers, and membranes; aggregation of surfactants in solution; amphi­ philes at electrode surfaces; adsorption at solid-liquid interfaces; and the structure of amphiphiles and polymers at vapor-liquid interfaces. Recent developments in catalysis and photocatalysis on metal oxides will be the emphasis of a continuing symposium on catalysis. Papers will cover ar­ eas that include partial oxidation of hydrocarbons, photocatalysis with an emphasis on photoassisted oxidation reactions, NO x removal catalysis by NO decomposition and reduction, combustion catalysis, surface chemis­ try, and preparation of and catalysis by oxides. The continuing sympo­ sium on electrochemical surface science will address surface electrochem­ istry in materials research. The focus of this four-day symposium will be new electrochemical synthetic methods and new methods for character­ izing electrosynthesized materials and modified electrode surfaces. The Langmuir lectures will be given by two outstanding young scientists, Al­ ice P. Gast of Stanford University and Cynthia M. Friend of Harvard University. The poster session will include general papers as well as those in the areas mentioned above and will be highlighted by four awards for the best student papers.

COMP

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| General session

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I B—Bioinformatics D

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Challenges of large databases* (CINF)

Intelligent materials for chemical sensing* (MTLS)

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I Force fields

Hyatt Regency

|

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Sci-Mix

/. E. Crowell, Program Chairman

|

Dj

J QSAR & related techniques

Division of Colloid & Surface Chemistry

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HIGHLIGHTS: Thirteen symposia will explore many aspects of the use of computers in chemistry. In particular, two symposia will focus on parameter development in commonly used computational chemistry methodologies: the first on parameter development in molecular mechan­ ics, the second on parameter development in semiempirical molecular orbital theory. There will also be a symposium on the use of the informa­ tion superhighway (the Internet) and how it is changing the face of com­ municating chemical information. Finally, there will be symposia on QSAR, NMR display, homology model building, bioinformatics, and computational evaluation of the synthetic feasibility of compounds.

ENVR Division of Environmental Chemistry Inc. M. Wells, Program Chairman McCormick Place East

S M Τ W Τ

Spectroscopy of atmospheric aerosols

D

Q—Teaching environmental chem* (INOR, CHED) D D D D

Β—Molecular modeling & computation** Chlorine in the paper industry

D D D Ό

Aqueous oxidants & photooxidants

D

Sci-Mix

Ε

Mechanistic environmental photochemistry

A D Ό

Student, awards

Ρ

Division of Computers in Chemistry

New cleaning technologies since CFCs* (I&EC)

D Ό

G. R. Famini, Program Chairman

Disinfection by-products

D Ό

Poster session: general (Sheraton)

Ε

Poster session: molecular modeling (Sheraton)

Ε

Poster session: disinfection by-products (Sheraton)

Ε

Poster session: mechanistic photochemistry (Sheraton)

Ε

Hyatt Regency

S M Τ W Τ

Computational evaluation of compounds

A

Homology model building & docking

D

Collaborative electronic notebooks* (CINF)

D

Β—Molecular modeling & computation* (ENVR)

D D D

HIGHLIGHTS; The program will feature symposia on a wide range of issues dealing with organic and inorganic compounds in JUNE 19,1995 C&EN 51

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM aqueous, terrestrial, and atmospheric systems. Among the program­ ming, a symposium on molecular modeling and environmental com­ putational chemistry will include an introductory tutorial session and a concluding panel discussion. A symposium on chlorine and chlorine compounds in the paper industry will feature discussions of the ana­ lytical, toxicological, and regulatory aspects of chlorine and chloroorganics. Other symposia will address photochemistry—including a symposium in honor of Jurg Hoigne, disinfection by-products, atmo­ spheric aerosols, and a paper on product biodegradability. The annual student awards symposium will also be featured.

FERT Division of Fertilizer & Soil Chemistry C. Cole, Program Chairman

Division of Fuel Chemistry F. Derbyshire, Program Chairman Sheraton

S M Τ W Τ

General session

A

Analytical methods for characterizing fossil fuels

D D

Direct coal liquefaction

Ρ D D

Biomass fuels

D D

Sci-Mix

Ε D

Air toxics & coal S M Τ W Τ

Sheraton

FUEI

Technologies for waste materials

D D D

New developments in fertilizers

A

Catalytic conversion of hydrocarbons**

Recycled materials for fertilizers

Ρ

SO x /NO x A

Specialty fertilizers

HIGHLIGHTS: Papers reporting innovative application of technolo­ gies to the production and use of fertilizers will be featured. These papers will include descriptions of manufacturing processes, environmental monitoring and remediation, and crop response to fertilizer materials. Symposia will cover new developments in fertilizer manufacture, recycled materials as components for fertilizer manufacture, and specialty fertilizers.

D

HIGHLIGHTS: Three of the symposia will bring an environmental emphasis to the program. Two of these will be concerned with flue gas emissions in the use of coal for power generation: The control of NO x and SOx, and issues relating to toxic air emissions, monitoring, and control. The third symposium will address technologies for the dispos­ al or use of waste materials. Other symposia also will reflect areas of topical interest: biomass fuels and chemicals; the catalytic conversion of polycyclic aromatics; new analytical methods for fossil fuel character­ ization; and direct coal liquefaction, which continues to attract consid­ erable attention, despite the poor funding climate for research.

FLUO GEOC Division of Fluorine Chemistry D. A. Dixon, Program Chairman

Division of Geochemistry Inc. McCormick Place East

S M Τ W Τ

Ruoro-amino acids & peptides in medicine**

Ρ

Τ. ί. Eglinton, Program

Chairman

Α

Tutorial: fluorine in biomedicinal chemistry

A

Fluorine in drug discovery* (MEDI)

Ρ

Sci-Mix

Ε

Sheraton

S M Τ W Τ

Humic/fulvic acids & colloidal materials* (I&EC)

D A

Geochemistry of light & nonhydrocarbons**

D D

Sci-Mix HIGHLIGHTS: Multidisciplinary symposia on fluoro-amino acids and peptides in medicinal chemistry and fluorine in drug design will be held. The symposia will cover synthesis, molecular design, and uses of these novel fluorinated materials. The division will hold a tutorial on fluorine in biomedicinal chemistry.

Platinum group element geochemistry

A

Β—Biomining: current & emerging technologies

D

Isotopic & molecular biogeochemistry of organics

Ρ D D

Mercury deposition & cycling "Cosponsored symposium, primary organizer(s) shown in parentheses. **Primary organizer, cosponsored symposium. A = AMP = PMD = AM/PM Ε = EVE DE = AM/PM/EVE PE = PM/EVE Β—Biotechnology for Bioremediation theme programming Q—Quality Standards theme programming

52 JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

Ε

D D

HIGHLIGHTS: A symposium will highlight recent progress in the rapidly growing field of compound-specific isotope analysis applied to biogeochemistry, organic geochemistry, physiology, and archeology. Another will focus on biomining technologies, including bioprocessing minerals and metal ores, bioremediation, and biorecovery. Papers also will focus on analytical aspects of aqueous carbon dioxide geochemis­ try and will emphasize measurements in seawater, freshwater, and brines. A symposium on platinum group element (PGE) geochemistry will feature experimental, theoretical, and field studies of PGE mobili­ ty and cycling. Mercury deposition and cycling will be the focus of a

symposium covering topics such as formation and geochemical behav­ ior of monomethyl mercury, mercury solubility, and speciation. A symposium on the geochemistry of natural gas and gas condensates, including theoretical, experimental, and field studies of light hydrocar­ bons and nonhydrocarbons, will aim at improving the understanding of gas deposits in the subsurface.

emissions standards; the chemistry of asphalt and its effect on every­ day life; new cleaning chemistries being developed to satisfy the chlorofluorocarbon ban set to become effective at the end of this year; the physicochemical basis of cement behavior for structural ap­ plications and the stabilization of toxic elements; alternative raw ma­ terials, solvents, reactor technology, catalysts, and process simulation for reduction of manufacturing facility emissions; the characteriza­ tion of natural humic and colloidal organic materials and their role in mobilization of radionuclide, heavy metal, and organic pollutant materials; the role of quality in the chemical industry; and public understanding of science.

HBT INOR

Division of the History of Chemistry R. E. Rice, Program Chairman McCormick Place North

S M Τ W Τ

Centennial of the Chicago section

Ρ

Division of Inorganic Chemistry Inc. T. E. Bitterwolf, Program Chairman

General session

A

Sidney Edelstein—an appreciation

Ρ A

Dexter award & cachet

HIGHLIGHTS: The program will feature two half-day symposia. One will focus on the 100th anniversary of the ACS Chicago Section and will feature personal recollections and reminiscences of long-time members of the section. The other symposium will mark the achieve­ ments of the late Sidney Edelstein—chemist, entrepreneur, historian, and division patron—with presentations by D. H. Abrahams, Arnold Thackray, Anthony Travis, and Mary Virginia Orna. Also, the Dexter award address will be given by William Brock.

I&EC Division of Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Inc. W. W. Schulz, R. Rogers, Program Chairmen

McCormick Place East

S M Τ W Τ

Organometallic chemistry vapor deposition

A

General solid state

D

Q—Teaching environmental chemistry* (ENVR, CHED) ID D D D A

Nanostructural materials* (PMSE)

; D Ρ

General organometallic chemistry Catalysis

Ρ

Photochemistry

Ρ

Poster session: in honor of Harry Gray

Ε

Carbene/carbyne chemistry

A

Surface modifications of & with inorganics

D D

Synthesis & reactivity of nonoxide solids

D D A

Metalloporphyrin chemistry

D D D

Sci-Mix

Ε

Metal hydrides/C-H activation

A

McCormick Place East

S M Τ W Τ

General transition-metal chemistry

Ρ A

Practical pollution prevention

D

Poster session: bioinorganic/ solid state

Ε

Humic/fulvic acids & colloidal materials**

D A

Poster session: main group/transition metal

Ε

Poster session (Sheraton)

Ε

Boron & related elements

D

D

Metal binding in biochemical systems

Ρ

Cement-based materials for the 21st century

D D

Novel ligands

Ρ

Q—Quality in the chemical industry* (YCC, TECH)

Ρ

General biochemistry

A

Industry response to new chromium regulations

Ρ D

Kinetics & mechanisms

A

Sci-Mix

Ε

Main group complex chemistry

A

. Public understanding of science

Q—Quality management systems in the lab* (TECH) Chemistry of asphalt-containing materials

A Ρ D D

Q—Quality in the chemical industry

A

New cleaning technologies since CFCs**

D D

Nanocrystals & low-dimension solids

Ρ

Metal clusters

Ρ

General main group chemistry

Ρ

HIGHLIGHTS: Symposia will examine compliance demands and testing costs for new Environmental Protection Agency chromium JUNE 19, 1995 C&EN 53

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM what synchrotron radiation is and how it can be used, followed by pre­ sentations describing applications in areas ranging from materials science to structural biology and environmental science. Hot and expanding nu­ clear matter will be the theme of a lengthy symposium covering topics such as ultrarelativistic fixed-target experiments, collective flow and the nuclear equation of state, multifragmentation in both light and heavy ion collisions, and the search for critical phenomenon. Topical symposia in the areas of nuclear medicine on advances in bioconjugate chemistry and positron emission tomography and neuroscience will be additional com­ ponents of this interdisciplinary and international program.

MEM Division of Medicinal Chemistry Γ. /. Perun, Program McCormick

Place

Chairman S M Τ W Τ

East

General session

D

Huoro-amino acids & peptides in medicine* (FLUO)

Ρ

Poster session/social hour (Sheraton)

Ε

A

Smissman award & fellowship awards

A

Fluorine in drug discovery**

Ρ

Nicotinyl acetylcholine receptor ligands

A

Drug targeting of RNA

Ρ

ORGN Division of Organic Chemistry D. /. Pasto, Program Place

Chairman

A

McCormick

Poster session

D

Organometallics

A

Neuroinflammation

Ρ

General organic reactions

A

East

Cell adhesion & migration

A

Drug design & synthesis

D

Cell cycle regulation

Ρ

Physical organic

Ρ

Synthesis of natural products

Ρ

Poster session

Ε

HIGHLIGHTS: The program will feature an award address by John Montgomery, winner of the Smissman award. One highlight, held over two days, will include symposia on the use of fluorine in com­ pounds involved in drug discovery and the medicinal chemistry of fluoro-amino acids and peptides. Another symposium on neuronal ion channels will discuss the emerging role of nicotinic receptor ligands in disease states such as Alzheimer's disease. The involvement of RNA as a specific target for new drugs will be the subject of a symposium, and the importance of increasing the structural diversity of new leads in the drug discovery process will be featured in a symposium discussing methods of developing new pharmacophores. The discovery of new agents to treat inflammatory mechanisms in other disease states will be the subject of a symposium on cell adhesion and migration. New tar­ gets for medicinal agents are also being identified in the study of cell cycle regulation and will be the subject of a symposium.

A

0—Technical achievements in organic chemistry j

D

Organic photochemistry

D

Macromolecular organic structures

Ρ

General organic synthesis

Ρ

Sci-Mix

Ε

Arthur C. Cope award symposium

Τ

I

Reductions in organic chemistry

Ρ

D

D •

!

j

Heterocyclic chemistry

A j

Poster session: synthesis/organic reactions

A

Stereoselective synthesis

NUCL

w

S M Τ

Pharmacophore mapping databases**

,

:D j

j

Poster session: physical/bioorganic related topics

Ρ

Natural product synthesis

Ρ A

Metal-catalyzed reactions

A

Division of Nuclear Chemistry & Technology

Bioorganic chemistry

D

P. A. Baisden, Program Chairman

Heterocyclic synthesis

jρ Ι

McCormick Place East

\S\M\T\W\T

Advances in bioconjugate chemistry

lD

Chemistry applications of synchrotron radiation

|D D Α

ι

Additional aspects of nuclear science

|

j

Hot & expanding nuclear matter

Ι

Positron emission tomography & neuroscience

i

I

j I

IA I

Ρ ID D D ι ι

ID ι

ι

HIGHLIGHTS: A symposium focusing on the uses of synchrotron radiation will be presented beginning with a half-day tutorial session on 54

JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

HIGHLIGHTS: The Cope award symposium will be held on Tues­ day, featuring presentations by the Cope awardee, George M. Whitesides, and Cope Scholar awardees Steven G. Boxer, Rick L. Danheiser, Michael E. Jung, Thomas J. Katz, Nelson J. Leonard, Kurt Mislow, Alarma Schepartz, Barry B. Snider, Craig A. Townsend, and Robert M. Waymouth. Special symposia will feature reduction in organic synthe­ sis, drug design and synthesis, organic photochemistry, and technical achievements in organic chemistry.

Hyatt

PETR

S M Τ W Τ

Regency

D D

Nanostructures, molecular electronics

D

Proton transfer

D D D D

Division of Petroleum Chemistry Inc.

Electrochemical surface science* (COLL)

D D D D

/. G. Reynolds, Program Chairman

Physical chemistry of membranes

Ρ D A Ε

Poster session S M Τ W Τ

Sheraton Tutorial: chemistry & technology of petroleum

D

Geochemistry of light & nonhydrocarbons* (GEOC)

D D

Poster session

Ρ

General session

Ρ

Petroleum chemistry & processing

D D A

International symposium on conversion catalysts

D D D A

Catalytic conversion of hydrocarbons* (FUEL)

D D

Coke formation & mitigation

Ρ D

HIGHLIGHTS: A symposium on petroleum chemistry will feature a tutorial covering characterization, structure, and processing; sessions on molecular transformation during processing will feature fluidized catalyt­ ic cracking, hydroprocessing, sulfur, and biomarkers; a symposium on hydrogen management will feature production, control and separation; and one on bottom-of-the-barrel processing will feature visbreaking, residium-fluidized catalytic cracking, coprocessing, asphalt, and asphaltenes. Another symposium will focus on coke formation and mitigation, featuring precursors and mechanisms. An international symposium on deactivation and testing of hydrocarbon conversion catalysts will feature testing methods, deactivation mechanisms, and model reactions. A gen­ eral papers symposium will feature catalysts, coking, and oil dispersion chemistry, and will include a poster session and social hour. Yet other symposia will focus on catalytic conversion of polycyclic aromatic hydro­ carbons and molecular isotopic composition of light hydrocarbons in fos­ sil fuels, including origins and applications.

Physical chemical processes

A

Dynamic behavior

Ρ

Energies & structure

Ρ

HIGHLIGHTS: The breadth of modern physical chemistry will be featured in five symposia devoted to interdisciplinary projects. The new Biophysical Subdivision will have a symposium on biophysical chemis­ try, devoted to the pioneering work of six major figures in the field (Ig­ nacio Tinoco, John Ross, Mostafa El-Sayed, Robin Hochstrasser, Harden McConnell, and Harold Scheraga). The topics will include nucleic acid structures, macromolecular structure and function, protein folding, bacteriorhodopsin, and macroscopic kinetics. Biological systems will also ap­ pear in a symposium on the physical chemistry of membranes that will feature energy and signal transduction, and membrane organization and permeability. An extensive symposium will focus on proton-transfer pro­ cesses and reactions, ranging from clusters and gases to polar solvents and biological systems. Chemical kinetics in environmental systems will be the focus of a major symposium that will cover chemical kinetics in urban environments and the upper atmosphere, alternative hydrocar­ bons, and waste environments. Finally, there will be a symposium on nanostructures, nanomaterials, and molecular electronics.

POLY Division of Polymer Chemistry Inc. W. J. Brittain, T. E. Long, Program Chairmen

PHYS Division of Physical Chemistry M. Rainer, Program Chairman

McCormick Place North

S M Τ W Τ

Synthesis of optical materials

A

Blending & order

A

Characterization & physics

Ρ

Polymer synthesis

Ρ

Dendritic & hyperbranched polymers* (PMSE)

Ρ D D

Hyatt Regency

s \M

Biophysical chemistry

D D D

Industrial symposium

D D D A

Biorelated materials

A

Unilever award symposium

A

Catalysis & synthesis

Ρ

Poster session: synthesis & characterization* (PMSE)

Ε

Poster session* (PMSE)

Ε

Q—Chemical kinetics in environmental systems

Τ W Τ

*Cosponsored symposium, primary organizer(s) shown in parentheses. **Primary organizer, cosponsored symposium. A = AMP = PMD = AM/PM Ε = EVE DE = AM/PM/EVE PE = PM/EVE Β—Biotechnology for Bioremediation theme programming Q—Quality Standards theme programming

D

General session

D

Polymers & organometallic complexes* (PMSE)

D D

General synthesis

A

HIGHLIGHTS: A multidisciplinary technical program will present recent advances in polymer structure, polymer morphology, controlled JUNE 19,1995 C&EN 55

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM synthesis, polymer physics, synthesis of novel polymeric structures, and specialty applications of polymers. The program will be highlight­ ed by the Unilever award symposium. A symposium on the role of polymer science in industry today will address the industrial innova­ tion process and different approaches to converting laboratory ideas to commercial success. Technical case studies will exemplify both success­ ful and unsuccessful industrial research efforts leading to commercial­ ization. The symposium will consist of 12 different presentations from major U.S. polymer-related companies including Eastman Kodak, Amoco, DuPont, 3M, GE, IBM, AT&T, Hoechst Celanese, Dow, and Exxon. The presentations will also describe the employment market in the chemical industry and the personal tools required to be successful as an industrial polymer scientist. This one-day symposium will be highlighted with an evening reception.

Tess award symposium on water-borne coatings. The SherwinWilliams Award symposium will recognize the best papers in applied polymer science submitted by students; six finalists will present their work. Finally, a wide variety of topics will be covered in the general papers/new concepts in polymeric materials sessions.

PROF Division of Professional Relations T. J. Kucera, Program Chairman

PMSE Division of Polymeric Materials: Science & Engineering Inc. F. N. Jones, Program Chairman McCormick Place North

S M Τ W Τ

General session: concepts in polymeric materials

A

Film formation

D D D

Nanostructural materials**

D D D A

Roy W. Tess award symposium

Ρ D A

Dendritic & hyperbranched polymers**

Ρ D D

Polymeric smart materials* (MTLS)

S M Τ W Τ

McCormick Place East

Ρ D

Pension portability

A

Maintaining marketability

Ρ

Sci-Mix

Ε

HIGHLIGHTS: Two symposia of concern to the professional life of chemists will be presented. The continuing problem of marketability in the present job environment will be addressed in the third symposium on maintaining marketability. The need for intensive training in com­ munication and interpersonal skills, risk-taking and entrepreneurship, as well as the implications of employment laws, will be discussed. A symposium on pension portability will cover the history of portable pensions for the past 30 years and what professional groups have been doing about them. Experts from TIAA-CREF, ACS, and IEEE will dis­ cuss the problem of portability and vesting, as well as what is happen­ ing on the legislative front.

D

Sherwin-Williams award symposium

Ρ

Poster session: synthesis & characterization**

Ε

SCHB

Polymer science at the boundaries

D

Rheology of coatings

D

Computers & polymer processing operations

D

Division of Small Chemical Businesses

Computers & polymer processing operations

D

Ν. Η. Giragosian, Program Chairman

Polymers & organometallic complexes**

D D

Sheraton

HIGHLIGHTS: Symposia will address topics in polymer science and engineering, with participation by many leading researchers from abroad. The symposium on dendritic and hyperbranched polymers will include 45 papers and posters covering synthesis, properties, and applications. Totally new synthetic routes will be described as well as industrial (coatings and adhesives) and biomedical (gene transfection) applications. The symposium on molecularly designed nanostructural materials and composites will include more than 60 contributions spanning synthesis, characterization, and properties of these materials. Polymer science at the boundaries will feature presentations by re­ searchers from other disciplines (for example, medicine, physics, and surface science) who work with polymers; their contributions to poly­ mer science and engineering are often of broad interest. The polymer synthesis with organometallic complexes symposium will cover new research on a range of metal-mediated polymerizations, including silicon-mediated polymerization. The computer simulation of structure development in polymer processing symposium will cover recent de­ velopments in this emerging field. The program will include a group of symposia of interest to people who work in polymeric coatings and related fields, film formation, rheology of coatings, and the Roy W.

56 JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

S M Τ W Τ

Technology transfer forum

D

Sci-Mix

Ε

Emerging technologies for clean air

Α

True stories of small chemical businesses

Ρ

*Cosponsored symposium, primary organizer(s) shown in parentheses. **Primary organizer, cosponsored symposium. A = AMP = PMD = AM/PM Ε = EVE DE = AM/PM/EVE PE = PM/EVE Β—Biotechnology for Bioremediation theme programming Q—Quality Standards theme programming

ACS

INDUSTRY ROADMAP Your guide to the ACS 210th National Meeting

PRESIDENTIAL EVENT SUNDAY. AUGUST 20 Presidential Event, Industry's Creative Inventions: From the Lab to Your Home. This ACS Presidential event will focus on successful product development: from invention to commercialization. This interactive event will include companies' displays of product development, interactive touch-screen displays, and a contest with giveaways. The event and reception will be held at the Fairmont Hotel, Imperial Ballroom, from 6:30 PM to 9:30 PM.

INTERNET EVENT ACS Industry Relations and Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) invite you to attend a reception entitled "Predictions for the Internet and The Web —1995 and Beyond." The program will be held at the 210th ACS National Meeting in Chicago on the evening of August 21. Keynote speakers will discuss the future of the Internet, and how ACS and CAS will address new challenges in an evolving information age. Hands-on demonstrations of the latest internet software. Representatives from Silicon Graphics and MCI will discuss how chemists can better utilize the Internet. This event will follow the Chemistry on the Infobahn Symposium. Check out the ACSWEB http://www.acs.org and the CASWEB http://www.cas.org

Industry and Innovation This year's fall meeting will be devoted to the chemical industry and its innovations. The ACS Presidential Event will focus on successful product development: from invention to commercialization. Other events at the meeting will highlight industrial themes such as creative inventions, quality and environmental issues. This roadmap is designed with the industrial chemist in mind. It will guide you to important technical symposia, workshops, professional development opportunities, and special events geared specifically for industrial chemists.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE ACS TECHNICAL PROGRAM IS ORGANIZED INTO SIX MAJOR CATEGORIES: GENERAL INDUSTRIAL TOPICS; BUSINESS SUCCESS; SAFETY & THE ENVIRONMENT; ADVANCED MATERIALS, POLYMERS AND PLASTIC; CATALYSIS AND PROCESS CHEMISTRY; AND FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY. PROGRAMMING FOR THIS MEETING BEGINS ON SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, AND CONTINUES THROUGH THURSDAY, AUGUST 24. CHECK THE FINAL PROGRAM FOR DATES AND TIMES, OR STOP BY THE MEETING REGISTRATION DESK FOR YOUR FINAL VERSION OF THE ACS INDUSTRY ROADMAP.

General Industrial Topics COS CHED LWM CINF CINF CINF COMP l&EC ORGN PROF PROF

Chemistry and the National Agenda: Future Employment Opportunities in the Chemical Sciences Careers in Chemical Information Poster Session: Inventory Systems for Laboratory Chemicals Collaborative Electronic Notebooks — Legal, Regulatory, Social, and Technical Issues Use of Chemical Information Generating New Compounds Leads Careers in Chemical Information Chemistry on the Infobahn Public's Understanding of Science: Are We Making Any Progress? Technical Achievements in Organic Chemistry Pension Portability Maintaining Marketability

Business Success YCC CHAL CHAL CHAL TECH l&EC

Quality in the Chemical Industry: What You Need to Know Licensing & Technology Transfer Protection of Intellectual Property Protection of Intellectual Property/Mock Trial on Patent Infringement Suit Quality Management Systems in the Laboratory Quality in the Chemical Industry

Advanced Materials, Polymers and Plastics INOR MTLS POLY PMSE PMSE

Surface Modifications of and with Inorganic Materials Polymeric Smart Materials The Role of Polymer Science in Industry Today Polymer Synthesis with Organometallic Complexes Roy W. Tess Award Symposium: Waterborne Coatings

Catalysis and Process Chemistry FUEL SO;/NO x PETR Petroleum Chemistry and Processing PMSE Computer Simulation of Structure Development in Polymer Processing Operations

Food and Agricultural Chemistry AGFD Contribution of Low- and Non-Volatile Materials to the Flavor of Foods AGRO Resistance and Management of Agrochemicals: Herbicides FERT New Developments in Fertilizer Manufacture FERT Recycled Materials as Components for Fertilizer Manufacture

Safety & the Environment AGRO Fumigants: Environmental Behavior, Exposures and Analysis CHAS Future of Regulations and Their Impact on Research CHAS Strategies for Developing and Implementing Risk Management Plans CHAS Prudent Practices 1995 ENVR Molecular Modeling and Environmental Computational Chemistry ENVR Chlorine and Chlorine Compounds in the Paper Industry ENVR Poster Session — Molecular Modeling and Environmental Computational Chemistry l&EC Industry Response to New Chromium Emission Regulations: Who Will Survive? l&EC New Cleaning Technologies Since Chlorofluorocarbons PHYS Chemical Kinetics in Environmental Systems

T H E ROLE OF POLYMER SCIENCE IN INDUSTRY TODAY Improving Polymers Research at Eastman Chemical Company with TQM, Philip D. Griswold Translating Polymer Science to Business Value at Hoechst-Celanese, Michael Jaffe GE Corporation R&D: New Development for GE Plastics, Cynthia Arnold-McKenna Polymer Science Research at Eastman Kodak: An Engineering Perspective, John M. Pochan Polymer Research at Exxon Chemical, James J. O'Malley The Role of Materials Science in the Plastics Industry, P. Stephen Chum

Short Courses Obtain information on any of these popular short courses with ACS's new FAX-on-demand service. Simply call 1-800-850-CHEM (toll free) and have your FAX number ready.

Biology/Biotechnology/Medicinal (ext. 784) Analytical Methods for Proteins THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

NEW! Mixture Experiments: An Experimental Design Approach to Formulation FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Industrial & Engineering (ext. 787)

Analytical (ext. 783)

Chemistry of the Synthesis of Peptides FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Atomic Absorption, ICP, and ICP Mass Spectrometry FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Introduction to Molecular Modeling and Computational Chemistry SATURDAY, AUGUST 19

Capillary Gas Chromatography: Techniques and Problem Solving SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20

Molecular Biology and Recombinant DNA Technology FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Chiral Separations by Chromatography FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Pharmacology for Chemists THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

NEW! Heterogeneous Catalytic Reactions in Industrial Applications FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Practical Capillary Electrophoresis SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20

Management/Business/Professional Bevelopment (ext. 788)

Solid-Phase Extraction in Environmental and Clinical Chemistry FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Building a Winning Scientific & Technical Team FRIDAY. AUGUST 18

Electronics for Laboratory Instrumentation: Making the Right Connections THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19 Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Fundamentals ofHighPerformance Liquid Chromatography FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Interpretation of Infrared Spectra TUESDAY-THURSDAY, AUGUST 22-24 Interpretation of Mass Spectra THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18 NEW! Practical Electroanalysis FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Practical Near-IP Analysis FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Sample Preparation Methods for Chemical Analysis FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Statistical Analysis of Lab Data SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20 NEW! Troubleshooting and Maintaining Gas Chromatographs with and without Spectrometers FRIDAY, AUGUST 18 Two-Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

Environmental (ext. 785) Air Toxics Analysis by U.S. EPA Methods FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 NEW! Catalytic Air Pollution Control: Commercial Technology FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Environmental Data Validation THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18 Laboratory Waste Management FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Water & Waste Analysis by U.S. EPA Methods FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Experimental Design/Chemometrics (ext. 786) NEW! Chemometric Techniques for Quantitative Analysis FRIDAY, AUGUST 18 Experimental Design for Productivity and Quality in R&D THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

Chemical Engineering and Process Fundamentals for Chemists THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19 Beyond the Basics: Chemical Engineering for Chemists SUNDAY-MONDAY, AUGUST 20-21

NEW! Conflict Management Techniques SATURDAY. AUGUST 19 Creative Problem Solving and Innovation in R&D FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Effective Management of Chemical Analysis Laboratories THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18 Effective Supervision of Scientists and the Technical Staff FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Essentials of Process Validation FRIDAY, AUGUST 18 New Product Development: From Research to Commercialization FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Patent Fundamentals for Scientists and Engineers SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 Technical Writing Workshop THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18 Organic/Physical/Polymer (ext. 789) Dispersion of Fine Particles in Liquids FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Emulsion Polymerization: Fundamentals and Recent Developments SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 Emulsions and Microemulsions FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Fundamentals of Microencapsulation FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Mechanical Behavior of Polymers: Correlation with Structure SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20 Organic Chemistry of Drug Design and Drug Action THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18 Polymer Coatings FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Polymer Synthesis FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Synthetic Organic Chemistry: Modern Methods and Strategies FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Quality (ext. 790) Experimental Design for Productivity and Quality in R&D THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18 Good Laboratory Practices and ISO 9000 Standards: Quality Standards for Chemical Laboratories FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 NEW! Methods Development, Validation Procedures, and Conformity Assessment in the Analytical Laboratory FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 Optimizing Quality Control of Pharmaceuticals and Biopharmaceuticals SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20 Quality Assurance/Quality Control in the Analytical Testing Laboratory FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 To Register for a Course or to Obtain Information by Phone or Mail, Write or Call: American Chemical Society Dept. of Continuing Education Meeting Code ACS9508 Telephone: (800) 227-5558 (toll free) or (202) 872-4508

Professional D e v e l o p m e n t Workshops a n d Programs Pre-registration for the following ACS Career Services workshop is required by August 11,1995.

Effective Jab UMMH

mi Career IraasMaaiai, Sunday, August 20,

and Monday, August 21,8 AM to 12 Noon. Major components of finding a job and changing careers are presented in this four-hour workshop: career skills and values clarification, résumé preparation, interviewing skills, and transitioning process. Fee: $25. To register for the above workshop, send a check payable to the American Chemical Society with your name, address, and phone number and indicate which day you wish to attend the workshop to Karen Dyson, Department of Career Services, American Chemical Society, 115516th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 by August 11,1995. The following three programs do not require pre-registration. Participants in the Mock Interviews and Résumé Reviews may sign up for individual appointments at each program location: MMk brtenriew feiileai, Sunday, August 20, Student Affiliates only (undergraduates), 1 PM to 7 PM and Monday, August 21, through Wednesday, August 23, all members, 8:30 AM to 5 PM. Sign-up (first come, first served) begins Sunday, August 20,12 Noon. Sessions give the chemist an opportunity to videotape a practice interview and receive immediate feedback on how to improve interviewing skills. Bring a copy of your résumé. The process takes about 45 minutes. Résaarf Review aad Career Aitittaace, Sunday, August 20,1 PM to 7 PM and Monday, August 21, through Wednesday, August 23,8:30 AM to 5 PM. Sign-up (first come, first served) begins Sunday, August 20,12 Noon. This program provides individual half-hour appointments with a career consultant for the purpose of reviewing your résumé and discussing your career options. Bring a copy of your résumé. LU Ο OC

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Recratters P a r t , Tuesday, August 22,12:30 to 2 PM. Representatives from four businesses (specialty chemical, pharmaceutical, environmental, and analytical labs) will discuss employment trends and recruitment and hiring practices of chemists. The following program is cosponsored with the Department of Career Services:

p

Hew Te Jvnp Start Year Career (cosponsored with the Society Committee on Education), Tuesday, August 22,2 to 5 PM. Provides - undergraduates an opportunity to assess their values, communication styles, and skills applicable to the workplace. Information on job market trends, career patterns, and organizational dynamics will be presented. Pre-registration is required. Call the Student Affiliates Program at (202) 872-4480.

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For more information on specific locations of all workshops and programs, see the final meeting program. If you have questions, call ACS Career Services at (800) 227-5558.

SPECIAL EVENTS MONDAY, AUGUST 21 Sci-Mix, an interdivisional poster session/mixer, 8:00 to 10:30 PM, Hyatt Regency. See technical program summary for participating divisions. TUESDAY, AUGUST 22 The Phoenix Awards — Honoring local sections for their outstanding National Chemistry Week-1994 activities. At 8:30 PM at the Fairmont Hotel. Dancing will follow the presentations. Tickets are $5.00.

SOCIAL EVENTS MONDAY, AUGUST 21 Breakfast, Women Chemists in Industry. This is a ticketed Event to be held at the Sheraton. Breakfast, ACS Corporation Associates, "Industrial Member Issues," 8-9:30 AM. Limited space is available. Please call 202-872-6320 for reservations. TUESDAY, AUGUST 22 Reception, Women Chemists Committee, 11:45 AM at the Sheraton. This is a COD event. Lunch, Women Chemists Committee, 12:15 PM. To be held at the

EMPLOYMENT SERVICES The ACS Department of Career Services will operate a National Employment Clearing House (NECH) in the River Exhibition Hall from Sunday, August 20, through Thursday, August 24. NECH offers employers and candidates the opportunity to conduct job interviews on site during the course of the meeting. Everyone participating on site at NECH must be registered for the meeting before NECH registration can be activated. For more information about ACS Employment's deadlines and registration information, call (800) 227-5558 and press 9 , 1 , 3 or e-mail [email protected]. NECH Hours of Operation. Sunday, August 20,1-7 PM (registration only); Monday, August 21, through Wednesday, August 23,8 AM to 6 PM; and Thursday, August 24, 8 AM to 1 PM. Interviewing will conclude at 5 PM, Monday through Wednesday, and at 1 PM on Thursday.

ACS Divisional woncsnops Division of Chemical Information Workshop, Teaching Chemical Information — Getting Started. Techniques and Resources for teaching chemical information. To attend please call Barbara Hurwitz at (207)878-5841. SUNDAY AUGUST 20,1 TO 5 PM

Chemistry from CAS AUGUST ft, 1 TO 4 PM Introduction to Online Searching for Chemists AUGUST 21.9 AM TO 4 PM AUGUST 22.9 AM TO 4 PM Introduction to Patents for Chemists and Engineers AUGUST 23.9 AM T012 NOON

Division of Chemical Technicians Patents on STN AUGUST 23.9 AM TO 12 NOON Workshop, Planning Effective Experiments: Getting the Most Out of Your Experimentation. (Dr. Wayne STN Commands AUGUST21.1T0 4PM Zirk) Topics to be discussed: The use of factorial, fractional factorial, Searching CASREACT with STN central composite designs, and Express (CASREACT) graphical analysis. To attend please AUGUST 23.9 AM TO 12 NOON contact Michael Boyd at (304) 7477974. Structure Searching with STN Express Division of Chemical Health & Safety, Safety Regulations for the AUGUST 21, 9 AM TO 4 PM AUGUST 22, 9 AM TO 4 PM Laboratory. Topics discussed: Important regulations and how to Structure Search Techniques — live safely and effectively with these Improving Precision with STN rules. Warren Kingsley, Eileen Segal Express and George Wahl AUGUST 24.9 AM TO 4 PM SATURDAY AUGUST 19. 9 AM TO 12N00N&1T04PM Division of Chemical Health & Safety, Chemist's Guide to Safety Information on the Internet. SATURDAY AUGUST 19.1 TO 4 PM

Other Workshops How to Use ACS Career Services to Your Advantage AUGUST 19, 5:30 TO 6:45 PM

Division of Polymeric Materials: Science & Engineering Workshop, "Film Formation from Aqueous How Mentoring Can Help Your Dispersions." SATURDAY AUGUST 19. 8 AM TO AUGUST 20,11 AM TO 12 NOON 5 PM Analytical Problem Solving: Sherlock Holmes Wears a Lab Coat! AUGUST 20.12 NOON TO 3 PM

STN Workshops

STN Basics AUGUST 21. 9 AM TO 12 NOON AUGUST 22.9 AM TO 12 NOON

Careers in Industry Panel Discussion — Co-op and Internship Programs: Vital Links in Career Development AUGUST 20.4:30 TO 6 PM How to Jump Start Your Career AUGUST 22.2:30 TO 5 PM

CHANGE

C&EN

M U M MIIHIWVJUMUU 1UM1M&MW

OF

ADDRESS

Allow at least 6 weeks for address change to become effective. Print clearly- -limit data to spaces provided—enter only data to be changed. Mail or fax to:

American Chemical Society Manager, Member and Subscriber Services RO. Box 3337, Columbus, OH 43210 Phone: 800-333-9511 (U.S. and Canada) 614-447-3776 Fax: 614-447-3671

ACS Member No.

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Thank you for completing this questionnaire!

Gain Fresh Perspectives, Ideas, and Solutions! Register for your choice of Analytical (ext. 783) Atomic Absorption, ICP, and ICP Mass Spectrometry FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Capillary Gas Chromatography: Techniques and Problem Solving SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20

Chiral Separations by Chromatography FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Electronics For Laboratory Instrumentation: Making the Right Connections THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy

ACS Short

Courses

in conjunction with the 210th ACS National Meeting August 1995 · Chicago, Illinois

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Fundamentals of High Performance Liquid Chromatography FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Interpretation of Infrared Spectra TUESDAY-THURSDAY, AUGUST 22-24

Interpretation of Mass Spectra

Biology/Biotechnology/ Medicinal (ext. 784) Analytical Methods for Proteins THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

Environmental (ext. 785) Air Toxics Analysis by U.S. EPA Methods FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

NEW! Practical Electroanalysis

Chemistry of the Synthesis of Peptides

NEW! Catalytic Air Pollution Control: Commercial Technology

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Practical Near-IR Analysis

Introduction to Molecular Modeling & Computational Chemistry

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Sample Preparation Methods for Chemical Analysis FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Environmental Data Validation

SATURDAY, AUGUST 19

Laboratory Waste Management

Molecular Biology and Recombinant DNA Technology

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Water and Waste Analysis by U.S. EPA Methods

Statistical Analysis of Lab Data

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20

Pharmacology for Chemists

NEW! Troubleshooting and Maintaining Gas Chromatographs with and without Spectrometers

THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

FRIDAY, AUGUST 18

Two-Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy

Solid Phase Extraction in Environmental and Clinical Chemistry

(ext. 786) NEW! Chemometric Techniques for Quantitative Analysis

THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

FRIDAY, AUGUST 18

Practical Capillary Electrophoresis SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Experimental Design/ Chemometrics

Experimental Design for Productivity and Quality in R&D THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

NEW! Mixture Experiments: An Experimental Design Approach to Formulation FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Industrial & Engineering (ext. 787) Chemical Engineering and Process Fundamentals for Chemists THURSDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 17-19

Organic/Physical/ Polymer (ext. 789) Dispersion of Fine Particles in Liquids FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Emulsion Polymerization: Fundamentals and Recent Developments SATURDAY, AUGUST 19

Emulsions and Microemulsions FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Fundamentals of Microencapsulation FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Beyond the Basics: Chemical Engineering for Chemists SUNDAY-MONDAY, AUGUST 20-21

Mechanical Behavior of Polymers: Correlation with Structure SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20

NEW! Heterogeneous Catalytic Reactions in Industrial Applications Organic Chemistry of Drug Design and Drug Action FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19 THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18

Management/Business/ Professional Development (ext. 788)

Polymer Coatings FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Polymer Synthesis FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Building a Winning Scientific and Technical Team

Synthetic Organic Chemistry: Modern Methods and Strategies

FRIDAY, AUGUST 18

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

NEW! Conflict Management Techniques SATURDAY, AUGUST 19

Creative Problem Solving and Innovation in R&D FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Effective Management of Chemical Analysis Laboratories THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18

Effective Supervision of Scientists and the Technical Staff FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Essentials of Process Validation FRIDAY, AUGUST 18

New Product Development: From Research to Commercialization FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Patent Fundamentals for Scientists and Engineers SATURDAY, AUGUST 19

COURSES FILL QUICKLY!

Receive Information Instantly By Fax! Obtain information on any of these popular short courses with ACS's new fax-on-demand service. Simply call (800) 850-CHEM (toll free) and have your fax number ready. Then, follow the simple, step-bystep directions entering one or more extensions of your desired short course(s), which are listed under each section heading. Within moments, you'll have complete details in hand—including course descriptions, dates, locations, registration forms, and hotel information.

Quality (ext. 790) Experimental Design for Productivity and Quality in R&D THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-19

Good Laboratory Practices and ISO 9000 Standards: Quality Standards for Chemical Laboratories FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

NEW! Methods Development, Validation Procedures, and Conformity Assessment in the Analytical Laboratory FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

Optimizing Quality Control of Pharmaceuticals and Biopharmaceuticals

To Register for a Course or to Obtain Information by Phone or Mail, Write or Call: American Chemical Society Dept. of Continuing Education Meeting Code ACS9508 1155 Sixteenth Street, NW Washington, DC 20036 Telephone: (800) 227-5558 (toll free) or (202) 872-4508

SATURDAY-SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-20

Technical Writing Workshop

Quality Assurance/Quality Control in the Analytical Testing Laboratory

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, AUGUST 17-18

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUGUST 18-19

££^

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM Tuesday, Aug. 22, 7:30 AM to 6 PM; Wednesday, Aug. 23, 7:30 AM to 3 PM; and Thursday, Aug. 24, 7:30 to 10:30 AM. Badge replacement facilities will be in the registration areas on Saturday, Aug. 19, 3 to 6 PM; Sunday, Aug. 20, 7:30 AM to 7 PM; Monday, Aug. 21, 7:30 AM to 5 PM; Tuesday, Aug. 22, 7:30 AM to 6 PM; Wednesday, Aug. 23, 7:30 AM to 5 PM; and Thursday, Aug. 24, 7:30 to 10:30 AM. Badge cases and booklet programs will be available in the registration area. One-Day-Session Tickets. $100 in advance, $135 on site. Fill in the appropriate information on the advance registration form on page 84, following the same procedure used for regular registration. Tickets will be sold in the registration area during the hours announced above and may be converted to full registration.

210th ACS National Vleefinu

Chicago REGISTRATION The deadline for advance registration for the Chicago meeting is July 21. The registration form is on page 84. Please allow mail registrations at least 10 days to reach ACS. Registrations received after the deadline will be returned. A separate form must be provided for each registrant, including guests. Registration payment should not be combined with any other payment—meeting registration has a separate mailing address. As an incentive to advance registration, appreciably discounted fees are in effect. The current scale of fees is shown at right. Either payment in full or authorization to charge a credit card (American Express, MasterCard, Visa, or Diners Club) must accompany your order. Purchase orders and training requests will not be honored. Mail completed form with payment to: American Chemical Society, Meetings, P.O. Box 18598, 20th St. Station, Washington, D.C. 20036-8598. Please allow at least three weeks to process your request. The meeting badge and receipt will be mailed to all registrants, including those residing outside the U.S., at the address shown on the 64 JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

registration form. (If a registrant's affiliation and business address are not available, please provide home address.) Non-U.S. registrants should include payment to cover any bank costs charged to the ACS. Please make payment in U.S. dollars. On-site registration facilities will be located on the mezzanine level of McCormick Place North and in the Sheraton, River Exhibition Hall. The hours for registration will be Saturday, Aug. 19, 3 to 6 PM; Sunday, Aug. 20, 7:30 AM to 7 PM; Monday, Aug. 21, 7:30 AM to 3 PM;

Abstracts. Abstracts will be mailed upon completion, about Aug. 7, to U.S. residents paying the additional postage fee. If a United Parcel Service address (street address) is not provided for the shipment of the abstract book, receipt prior to the meeting is not guaranteed. Receipt cards will be mailed to all other registrants ordering the abstracts, to be exchanged for books in the registration area. Orders for abstracts only should be sent to Product Services, Room M432, ACS, 1155—16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036, or call (800) 227-5558. Refunds. Requests for full refund of registration will be honored if received, together with badge and a copy of the receipt, by Aug. 11. After that date, a refund of 80% of the registration fee may be obtained if the request is received by Sept. 8. Refund requests received after Sept. 8 will not be honored. Social events tickets may be refunded in advance if received at ACS by Aug. 11. After that date, refunds will be made on site until 48 hours before the scheduled event. See Tours on page 74 about refunds on tour tickets.

Fee

Fee of registrant

MEMBER ACS member or national affiliate Member emeritus/retired Student member or affiliate, less than postdoctoral status 50-year member Unemployed (NECH waiver)

Advance On site

$190

$225

85 15

120 15

No fee No fee No fee No fee

VISITOR Non-U.S. resident or nonchemical scientist or chemical technician Guest of registrant

of registrant

Advance On site

NONMEMBER Chemical scientist eligible for $285 membership in the society who is a U.S. resident Student, less than 15 postdoctoral status ONE-DAY SESSION 100 Adult 5 Student 5 Precollege teacher

$320

15

135 5 5

EXPOSITION ONLY 190

225

15

15

Adult Student na = not available.

na na

25 5

210th ACS National Meeting

Chicago HOUSING Room reservations. Mail the housing form (see page 68) for the official hotels listed on page 66 to ACS, Meetings Department, P.O. Box 18598,20th St. Station, Washington, D.C. 20036-8598. Reservations at the ACS rate cannot be made directly with the hotels and cannot be made by telephone. Requests may be faxed to (202) 872-4081, (202) 872-6128, or (202) 833-7711, but please do not send a second copy by regular mail unless you mark the mailed copy "confirming fax/' since this will result in duplicate reservations. (Because of the large volume, we are unable to confirm receipt of faxes.) Use a separate form for each room requested. Registrants sharing a room should use one form listing the names of all occupants. Reservations will be processed on a first-come, first-served basis only. Please note at least four choices when making your selection. If all the hotels you've requested are sold out, the next available hotel will be assigned according to your location and rate preference. Deadline for receipt of all housing transactions is July 21. Reservations will be acknowledged directly to the individual listed on the reservation form, indicating the assigned hotel, rate, and room guarantee information. Please allow at least 10 business days for processing a request. Requests received after the deadline will be returned. Occasionally, housing requests are sent but not received by ACS. You may confirm your reservation two weeks after sending it by calling the ACS Housing Bureau. Sometimes, ACS acknowledgments are mailed but are never received by the guest. Please do not assume you were assigned any of your hotel choices. If you do not receive an acknowledgment in the mail approximately three weeks after sending your housing form, you should call the ACS Housing Bureau at (202) 872-6008 and confirm your hotel assignment. Housing applies to Aug. 16 through Aug. 25 only. If you wish to extend your stay beyond the time of the meeting (arriving before Aug. 16, departing after Aug. 25) you must make reservations for the additional nights directly with your assigned hotel. Accommodations are available for guests with disabilities. If you require special accommodations because of a disability, please mark the appropriate box on your housing form. Do not send a check to ACS. Checks and money orders received by the ACS Housing Bureau will be returned to you. If you provided a credit card number, it will be forwarded to the hotel to guaran-

tee your reservation. If you did not provide a credit card number, you will need to guarantee your room directly to your assigned hotel within 10 days of the date on your ACS housing acknowledgment. If you do not have a credit card, payment for your entire stay may be required upon check-in. Failure to guarantee your reservation directly with your assigned hotel can result in cancellation of your room reservation. Some hotels may elect to charge a one night's deposit on your credit card upon receipt rather than wait until you arrive. Don't be a no show. Failure to cancel a guaranteed reservation can result in a one night's charge to your credit card by the hotel. Changes in arrival/departure dates or cancellations by July 21 should be faxed or mailed to ACS. After July 21, all correspondence concerning housing matters, including cancellations and changes, should be made directly with the hotel. A map indicating hotel locations appears on page 66. Hotel codes, names, ACS guaranteed rates, and other hotel information are also on page 66. Be sure to provide all the information requested on the ACS housing form. All hotels on the ACS housing list will have access to a complimentary shuttle Sunday through Thursday to McCormick Place.

210th ACS National Meeting

Chicago

TRAVEL INFORMATION American, Delta, and USAir are the official airline carriers for the 1995 ACS Meeting Travel Program. Attendees can get substantial savings on airfares from these carriers through special discounts that include: • 5% off lowest applicable coach roundtrip fares. • 10% off applicable unrestricted coach fares. In addition, Delta and USAir are offering special zone fares that are less than the unrestricted fares and do not require a Saturday night stay, and American will waive the Saturday night stay requirement with an additional $100 fee. To make your reservation, contact the airline directly or use your personal travel agent. Refer to the file numbers below: American (800) 433-1790 7 AM to midnight, EST Star File No. S-9900 Delta (800) 241-6760 8 AM to 11 PM, EST File No. N0800 USAir (800) 334-8644 8 AM to 9 PM, EST Gold File No. 38540144

.^^ÊM^^^^^^ÊKÊ^^:

Chicago Tips for a safe stay • When walking, stick to main thoroughfares and well-lit areas. • If walking, don't wear fancy jewelry in plain sight. • Don't wear your meeting badge outside the hotels. • Be cognizant and alert to surroundings. Look alert. • When walking after dark, don't hug the buildings or cars; walk in the open or near the curb. • Carry your purse close to your body. • Don't leave valuables in your room. Get a hotel safe deposit box. • Travel in groups. Don't be a loner, particularly in the evening. • Abide by common sense: If something looks suspicious, report it and/or avoid it. Free Tickets! All individuals who make reservations using the ACS Meeting Travel Program will be entered into a drawing for two free airline tickets (good for one year for travel within the continental U.S.).

210ft ACS National Meetine

Chicago LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS ACS Hospitality Center. The Chicago Section welcomes visitors and invites meeting participants to visit the Hospitality Center, located in the Sheraton. Volunteers will be happy to answer any questions on the Chicago area and provide information on local restaurants, points of interest, transportation, tips on shopping, or just some friendly conversation. Tickets for ACS-organized tours will be sold Saturday, Aug. 19,2 to 6 PM, and Sunday, Aug. 20, through Thursday, Aug. 24, 8:30 AM to 5 PM. ACS Information and Message Center. The Information Center will be located in McCormick Place and will be open Saturday, Aug. 19, 3 to 6 PM; Sunday, Aug. 20, 7:30 AM to 7 PM; Monday, Aug. 21, through Wednesday, Aug. 23, 7:30 AM to 6:30 PM; and Thursday, Aug. 24, 7:30 AM to 5:30 PM. Personal messages may be exchanged and lost-and-found service will be JUNE 19,1995 C&EN 65

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM provided. Mail and telegrams should be ad­ dressed in care of your hotel. Communica­ tions addressed to the society will be held at the Information Center. No one will be paged in meeting sessions. The society can­ not accept the responsibility for the delivery of mail or nonemergency messages.

Chicago hotel and McCormick Place locations

ACS Member Resource Center. Plan to visit the ACS Member Resource Center during the meeting. The center is available to all attendees—members and nonmembers—to acquaint you with the society. In­ formation about ACS services, activities, and products will be on continuous dis­ play throughout the meeting. The Member Resource Center will be located in the registration area in McCor­ mick Place. It will be staffed by ACS per­ sonnel who will be available to answer questions about the displayed material during the regular meeting hours: Satur­ day, Aug. 19, 3 to 6 PM; Sunday, Aug. 20, 7:30 AM to 7 PM; and Monday, Aug. 21, through Thursday, Aug. 24, 7:30 AM to 5 PM. Staff members will be available to accept applications from attendees who wish to join the society or reinstate their membership. Nonmembers who submit an application for membership can regis­ ter for the meeting at member rates and will be permitted to participate in the Na­ tional Employment Clearing House, which will be located in the Sheraton. Staff from the ACS Member Insurance Office will also be available to discuss in­ surance plans and investment opportuni­ ties for ACS members such as group term life, accidental death and dismember­ ment, hospital indemnity and disability

Lake St. Randolph St. Washington St. Madison St. Monroe St. Adams St. Jackson Blvd.

McCormick Place is approximately 2 miles from ACS hotels. ACS shuttle will be provided between official ACS hotels and McCormick Place.

Cermak Rd.

Hotels in Chicago Single

Code/hotel 1 Best Western Inn of Chicago

$84

Additional person

Double3

b

Suites

A

«£

γ

^

s

J

$84

$ 0

$175 up

Yes

$12

Yes

No

No

Yes

2 Bismarck d

85

85

20

200 up

Yes

18

Yes

Off site

Off site

Yes

3 Days Inn Lake Shore Drive

90

110

15

165 up

Yes

10

Yes

Exer. room

Outdoor

Yes

4 Clarion Executive Plaza 5 Fairmont e

98

98

15

175 up

Yes

19

Yes

Exer. room

No

Yes

132

152

25

350 up

No

22

Yes

Off site

Off site

Yes

6 Holiday Inn City Centre

100

110

16

150 up

Yes

19

Yes

On site

In/outdoor

Yes

7 Hyatt Regency Chicago

125

145

25

365 up

Yes

20

Yes

Off site

Off site

Yes

95

95

20

250 up

Yes

20

Yes

On site

Indoor

Yes

75

85

12

na

No

13

Yes

No

No

Yes

128

148

20

200 up

Yes

12-19

Yes

On site

Indoor

Yes

8

Inter-Continental

9 Oxford House 10 Sheraton Chicago

Note: The rates listed above do not include the current 14.9% room and occupancy tax per room per night, which is subject to change, a Double/double (two beds) rates are calculated by adding the additional person charge to the double rate for each guest over two persons, b Hotels that are not a direct ACS shuttie stop are within close walking distance of a property that is a direct stop, c Parking rates are per day and can change without notice, d Recommended for students, e Double/double rooms have two twin beds only, na = not available.

Key:

^ * W

= HarKing

LS•B^i

r

= Health club

( 66 JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

1

= Roorr service = Accessible rooms for persons with disabilities

fcL—jd Ξ^ΕΖ

= Direct A u s shuttle stop = Swimming pool

I

income protection, as well as tax-deferred annuities and individual retirement ac­ counts (IRAs). Direct telephone service will be available at the booth Monday through Thursday to the ACS Member & Subscriber Services Department in Columbus, Ohio, from 7:30 AM to 3 PM and to the Member Insurance Plan Administrator's Office from 9 AM to 4 PM. If you have questions about your membership record (for example, member election date, subscriptions) or your insur­ ance coverage, stop by and a staff member will be happy to assist you. Schedule a visit to the ACS Member Resource Center during the meeting to meet with staff members and browse through the ACS information on display. ACS Offices. Following is a list of ACS offices and their locations at the meeting. • Operations. McCormick Place North. • Operations. McCormick Place East. • Operations. Hyatt Regency. • Operations. Sheraton. • Information and Message Center. McCormick Place North. • Hospitality Center. Sheraton. • Chemical & Engineering News. Sheraton. • ACS Exposition. McCormick Place North. • National Employment Clearing House. Sheraton. • Executive Director. Sheraton. • Finance. McCormick Place North. • Finance. Sheraton. • Government Relations & Science Policy. Sheraton. • Press Room. Hyatt Regency. • Publications. Sheraton. • Ticket Control Office. Sheraton. Attendee Locator. Computer terminals will be located in the registration area in McCormick Place. ACS staff will be avail­ able to assist attendees with locating their colleagues and in updating their personal data. Please update your records if any information has changed sinced you have submitted your registration form. This in­ formation will be extremely helpful in the event of an emergency. Audiovisual Services. Offices a n d / o r service desks with slide-viewing facilities will be available in all meeting locations. Carousels will be available for loan to speakers wishing to load their slides pri­ or to their sessions. These audiovisual service locations will be open Sunday, Aug. 20, through Thursday, Aug. 24, from 8 AM to 5 PM: • McCormick Place North. • McCormick Place East. • Sheraton. • Hyatt Regency. Conferences with ACS Staff. Discus­ sions with society staff members may be arranged through the ACS Executive Of­ fice in the Sheraton, Sunday, Aug. 20,

through Thursday, Aug. 24, 8 AM to 5 PM. Telephone for an appointment if you would like to discuss activities of the so­ ciety in any of the following areas: awards, constitution and bylaws, divi­ sional activities, local section activities, meetings and expositions, membership in ACS, nominations and elections, ACSPetroleum Research Fund, professional relations, professional training, public af­ fairs, public relations, regional meetings, and other special projects. ACS Division Membership. Divisional membership is evidence of your interest in that particular field of chemistry or chemical engineering and in the work of the division. Division members are grant­ ed at least one special privilege—a re­ duced rate on the purchase of meeting abstracts. Most divisions offer a number of additional services. ACS members may become members of one or more divi­ sions by filling out a divisional member­ ship form and paying the required dues. This can be done in the registration area at the meeting or upon request to the sec­ retary of the division. Child Care Services. Child care will be provided by KiddieCorp; see box below for more details. Facilities for Persons with Disabilities. ACS is committed to making the meeting accessible to all people. We realize some people may have special requirements, such as interpreters for the hearing im­ paired and shuttle vehicles with lifts. We will do our best to accommodate every­ one. Most facilities used for meeting

Child care services ACS is working with KiddieCorp, a nationally known provider of child care for associations, to provide child care during the meeting. The child care facility will be located in the Hyatt Regency. The hours of opera­ tion are Sunday, Aug. 20, through Wednesday, Aug. 23, 8 AM to noon and 1:30 to 5:30 PM. Extended hours on Sunday, Aug. 20, only are 6:30 to 10:30 PM. The hours of operation on Thursday, Aug. 24, are 8 AM to noon. Advance registration is recommend­ ed, since child care service is not guar­ anteed if you register your child(ren) on site. Late or on-site registration will be available on a space-available basis only. KiddieCorp accepts chil­ dren ages six months through 12 years. The preregistration deadline for child care is Aug. 10. For more information, or a registration form, call KiddieCorp at (800) 942-9947 or (619) 455-1718. Cost: $7.50 per hour per child.

functions are readily accessible. Hotels having appropriately designed sleeping rooms are so identified on the hotel list. Registrants requiring sign language in­ terpreting can submit their request by e-mail to [email protected] or by using the telecommunications relay service to call the Meetings Department at (202) 872-8069. [If you do not know the TDD relay num­ ber for your area, you can call the Federal Communications Commission at (202) 6326999 (TDD).] When submitting your re­ quest for services, be prepared to furnish the following information: your name, ad­ dress, telephone number, fax number, the type of interpreting needed, and the day, date, time, and location of the sessions you will be attending. Please call no less than four weeks before the meeting as ACS can­ not accommodate last-minute requests for interpreters. You will receive a confirma­ tion of your request after it has been ful­ filled. If you must cancel, please notify the Meetings Department immediately. There is a box on the registration form to be checked if you would like to be contacted in advance of the meeting concerning oth­ er special needs. If you have special needs during the meeting, contact the nearest ACS Operations Office. Speakers Information. Each meeting room will be equipped as follows: 2-inch χ 2-inch (35-mm) slide projector, overhead projector, screen, and lighted podium with remote slide control and lapel microphone. To re­ quest other special equipment, contact the nearest ACS Operations Office during the meeting. Speakers must register for the meeting unless otherwise notified. Poster Sessions. The poster board size is 4 feet high by 6 feet wide. Authors are re­ sponsible for mounting their material prior to the opening of the poster session. Boards should be ready one hour prior to the start time of the session for authors to mount their papers. Authors are responsi­ ble for removing their material immediate­ ly after the close of the session. ACS cannot assume responsibility for materials beyond those time limits. Posters will be displayed for the entire morning, afternoon, or evening of their assigned days. Authors will be with them at the time indicated in the technical program. Shuttle Service. A complimentary shuttle service to McCormick Place will be offered. Buses will run approximately every 15 min­ utes; traffic may delay certain routes during rush hours. Service will be 20 to 30 minutes between 9:30 AM and 4 PM. An evening service will be operated between hotels. Daytime Shuttle to McCormick Place. Drop-off point is McCormick North. Pickup points are McCormick Place East & North. Operating times are Sunday, Aug. 20, through Wednesday, Aug. 23, 7 AM to 7 PM; Thursday, Aug. 24, 7 AM to 6 PM. JUNE 19,1995 C&EN 67

210th ACS National Meeting Chicago, ill., Aug. 2 0 - 2 4 , 1 9 9 5

HOUSING FORM Deadline for receipt at ACS: July 21,1995

Use this form only for ACS participating hotels. Reservations CANNOT be made by telephone, but can be faxed to (202) 872-4081, (202) 872-6128, or (202) 833-7711 or mailed to ACS Meetings, P.O. Box 18598, 20th St. Station, Washington, D.C. 20036-8598. Please DO NOT mail AND fax as this will result in duplicate reservations. Owing to the large volume of reservations received each day, we are unable to confirm receipt of faxes. Mail acknowledgment to:

Surname



Name Organization/department Address



City, State Country Telephone



Office

M.I.

First Name

ZIP Fax

_ _ HOTELS: List hotel code number and name in order of preference below:

Home

_

I

1ST CHOICE-HOTEL CODE & NAME

3RD CHOICE-HOTEL CODE & NAME

2ND CHOICE-HOTEL CODE & NAME

4TH CHOICE-HOTEL CODE & NAME

D Single (1 person, 1 bed) D Double (2 persons,1 bed) D Double/double (2 beds) Π Suite, 1 bedroom or 2 bedrooms ARRIVAL DAY AND DATE:

NUMBER OF NIGHTS:

Please print ALL names (including your own) to occupy room below. Use a separate form for EACH room: Number of persons in room: Adults Children TS:

Surname

First Name

I

I\A.\.

Name(s)

CHILDREN (must include age): First Name

Age

First Name

Age

Name(s) D Check here if you require any special accommodations due to a disability. If so, please specify: D Nonsmoking room (if available)

Special request:

HOTEL PREFERENCE BASED PRIMARILY ON:

D Rate

D Location

PAYMENT: DO NOT SEND A CHECK TO ACS FOR THIS RESERVATION All hotels require either a credit card number or advance payment to hold your reservation. You must guarantee this reservation within 10 days of the date indicated on your ACS Housing Acknowledgment directly to your assigned hotel. Failure to do so can result in its cancellation. If you wish to have ACS forward your credit card number directly to your assigned hotel to guarantee your reservation, please provide: D MasterCard

DVisa

D American Express

D Diners Club

Expiration Date

CREDIT. CARD NUMBER: CARDHOLDER NAME (Please print):. CHANGES in arrival and departure should be mailed or faxed directly to the ACS Housing Bureau by July 21. After July 21, all housing matters should be directed to your assigned hotel. The name of each hotel guest must be listed. Room assignments will be made in the order received. Incomplete information will result in a delay in processing your request. Please read the housing information on pages 65 and 66 before completing this form.

68 JUNE 19,1995 C&EN

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CIRCLE 12 ON READER SERVICE CARD

I N S P I R E R&D BREAKTHROUGHS W I T H T H E S E D U P O N T " I D E A I N T E R M E D I AT E S "

Adi-Pure® Adipic Acid HOOC(CH 2 ) 4 COOH

Adiponitrile NC(CH 2 ) 4 CN

Hexamethylenediamine H 2 N(CH 2 ) 6 NH 2

Dibasic Acid (DBA) HOOC(CH 2 ) n COOH η = 2-4

Methylglutaronitrile NCCH(CH 3 )CH 2 CH 2 CN

DBE Dibasic Esters ROOC(CH 2 ) n COOR R = Me, /Bu

Acetonitrile CH 3 CN

Dytek® A 2-Methylpentamethylenediamine H 2 NCH 2 CH(CH 3 )(CH 2 ) 3 NH 2

η = 2,3,4 and 2-4

2-Pentenenitrile CH 3 CH 2 CH=CHCN

Dodecanedioic Acid HOOC(CH 2 ) 10 COOH Corfree® Ml Diacid HOOC(CH 2 ) n COOH η = 8-io 1,5,9-Cyclododecatriene

Dytek® EP 1,3-Pentanediamine H 2 NCH(C 2 H 5 )CH 2 CH 2 NH 2 1,2-Diaminocyclohexane

3-Pentenenitrile CH 3 CH=CHCH 2 CN

•NH2

2-Methyl-3-butenenitrile CH 2 =CHCH(CH 3 )CN 1,5 -Cyclooctadiene

NH 2 bis-Hexamethylenetriamine H 2 N(CH 2 ) 6 NH(CH 2 ) 6 NH 2 Hexamethyleneimine

Γ ΝΗ

4 -Vinylcyclohexene r^VCH=CH

2

To receive more information, our product catalog or product samples, write to: DuPont Nylon, LR-3N48, P.O. Box 80705, Wilmington, DE 19880-0705. Or call U.S.: (800) 231-0998 Canada: (800) 668-6942

mmm DuPont Nylon CIRCLE 10 ON READER SERVICE CARD For immediate electronic response e-mail: [email protected]. reference DUP522 or WWW http://pubs.acs.org (click on PIN).